The real (English pronunciation: /reɪˈɑːl/; Brazilian Portuguese: [ʁeˈaw] "royal, real"; sign: R$; code: BRL) is the present-day currency of Brazil and was also the currency during the period 1690 to 1942. When the first real circulated, the plural used was réis. The currently used plural form is reais, with the symbol R$ and ISO 4217 code BRL. The modern real is subdivided into 100 centavos. The exchange rate as of August 26, 2009 is approximately BRL 1.87 to USD 1.00.
The kwanza (sign: Kw; ISO 4217 code: AOA) is the currency of Angola. Four different currencies using the name kwanza have circulated since 1977.
The Kwanza.
Angolan Kwanza :-)
Angolan Kwanza :-)
None. Each South American country has its own currency, such as Venezuela (Bolivar, VEF), Argentina (Peso, ARS) or Brazil (Real, BRL).
Currency: Kwanza
An angolar is a former currency of Angola, used between 1926 and 1958, and divided into 100 centavos.
The currency of Brazil is the Brazilian real, abbreviated as BRL. It was introduced in 1994 as part of a plan to stabilize the economy and curb hyperinflation. The symbol for the real is "R$."
Today's stock market closing set it to BRL 1,93. (Feb 18th, 2013).
On May 15, 2010 one Brazilian real [BRL] converts to $0.56 USD [U.S. dollar]. One U.S. dollar converts to 1.79 Brazilian real [BRL]. Its currency sign is R$.
Angola