No, the official currency in Qatar is the Qatari riyal (QAR), and the dirham is not accepted as legal tender. However, some businesses may accept dirhams informally, especially near the borders with the UAE, but this is not common. It is best to use Qatari riyals for transactions in Qatar.
The riyal is the unit of currency for the State of Qatar. It is divided into 100 dirham. Currently, one Qatari Rial/Riyal is worth twenty seven cents.
Not all Gulf countries use the same currency. For example, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia use the riyal. Kuwait uses the dinar, and the UAE uses the dirham AED.
Dirham is the currency of Morocco, the United Arab Emirates, Libya and Qatar. These countries use the short scale of numbering so one billion would have 12 zeros.1,000,000,000,000* * * * *An intermediate edit to the answer contradicts itself. If (and I claim no knowledge here) these countries use the short scale, then a billion has 9 zeros. It has 12 zeros only if they used the long scale.
United Arab Emirates dirham was created in 1971.
One dirham is divided into 100 fills. The fill is the smallest unit of currency in the UAE and several other countries that use the dirham. While fills are commonly referenced in pricing, they are not often used in everyday transactions due to their low value.
Value of 2000 dirham in Indian Rupees is 24,580
The dirham is primarily used in two countries: the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Morocco. In the UAE, the currency is known as the Emirati dirham (AED), while in Morocco, it is called the Moroccan dirham (MAD). Both currencies are subdivided into smaller units, with the UAE dirham consisting of 100 fils and the Moroccan dirham consisting of 100 centimes.
It depends on what the question is asking. If it is asking what word Moroccans use for "money", the most common term is the Arabic word "flus" (فلوس), which is a slang term for money used across the Arab word. Sometimes the proper Arabic word "maal" (مال) is used instead, or the French words "argent" or "centimes". If it is asking what currency Moroccans use, the Moroccan Dirham - MAD (درهم مغربي) is the currency of Morocco.
100 Dirham = £18.07
The currency in the United Arab Emirates is the Emirati Dirham, or simply Dirham. The symbol is AED.
The Morocco Dirham (MAD) is a fully convertible currency.
I think 1000 fils in a dirham.