Which countries suffix their currency and how much is this stuck to? [closed]

Which countries suffix their currency and how much is this stuck to? [closed] - Crop unrecognizable male in casual outfit standing with different nominal pars of dollar banknotes in pocket of jeans jacket

In most countries I can think of including my own, prices are usually done with the currency symbol first, then the price like "£12.34" or "$98.76". I seem to imagine somewhere I went as a child I saw it suffixed instead, like "12.34£" but I can't remember where.

How common are prefixing and suffixing in relation to each other? And in countries which use the "minority" system, how rigorously is this adhered to? I imagine street vendors with handwritten signs would use the one most common in that country, but what about big businesses dealing with international companies? Do they change to use the more "common" one?






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Which is the suffix for currency * &?

In English we write the currency symbol to the left, use "," as thousands separator and "." as decimal point no matter the currency. But you can see Europeans writing here very commonly with the "$" or "\u20ac" after the number and, less commonly, using "," as a decimal point.

Which country is using this money?

All currencies in the world - List of countries and their currencyCountryCurrencyISO CodeArmeniaArmenian dramAMDAustraliaAustralian dollarAUDAustriaEuroEURAzerbaijanAzerbaijani manatAZN165 more rows

Which currency is the highest in the world?

1. Kuwaiti dinar. Known as the strongest currency in the world, the Kuwaiti dinar or KWD was introduced in 1960 and was initially equivalent to one pound sterling.

How do countries decide who to put on their currencies?

Factors that affect foreign exchange rates include the political climate of a country, inflation, public debt, GDP, confidence, central bank/government intervention, and the balance of trade.



Country and their currency |# Currency of all Countries




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