Cent (currency)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Categories: Articles lacking sources from October 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Currency signs | Cent
¢ c
In currency, the cent is a monetary unit that equals 1/100 of various countries' basic monetary units. The word also refers to the coin which is worth one cent. In the United States and Canada, the 1¢ coin is generally known by the nickname penny, alluding to the British coin and unit of that name.
Etymology
฿ • ₵ • ¢ • $ • ₡ • B/. • ₫ • € • ƒ • ₲ • Kč • ₭ Former signs Image:Currency-Symbol Regions of the World circa 2006 cropped.png Etymologically, the word cent derives from the Latin word centum meaning hundred. SymbolWhere the cent is a subdivision of a dollar (abbreviated $), a cent is represented by the cent sign, a lower-case letter c pierced top to bottom by a forward slash or a vertical line: ¢. In other currencies, for example of Euro cent, a normal c is used more often as an abbreviation. Cent amounts between 1 cent and 99 cents can be represented as one or two digits followed by the appropriate abbreviation (2¢, 99¢, 2c, 99c), or as a subdivision of the larger unit (€0.99). Again usage varies from one currency to another. In the United States and Canada, the usage ¢ is more common, while in Australia, New Zealand and the Eurozone, the c is more common. In South Africa and Ireland, only the c is ever used. When written, the cent sign (¢ or c) follows the amount, versus a larger currency symbol placed at the beginning of the amount. For example 2¢ and $0.02, or 2c and €0.02. UsageMints all over the world usually create coins with values up to between the equivalent of 0.1 ~ 10 U.S. dollars, while reserving banknotes for higher values. As inflation lowers the value of currencies, many have replaced the lowest-valued banknotes with coins (Canadian dollar, Australian dollar, pound sterling, euro), removed the lowest-valued coins from circulation, and/or introduced higher-valued bills. The U.S. dollar is a notable holdout, using a $1 bill along with a (less-popular) coin, where nearly all other industralized nations use solely a coin for the approximate equivalent value. Other monetary unit subdivision systems are possible, such as the old pound sterling, which until decimalisation in 1971 was subdivided into 20 shillings (s) or into 240 old pence (d). Examples of currencies around the world featuring cents, or related words from the same root such as centimo, centesimo, centavo or sen, are:
Examples of currencies which do not feature cents
External links
ca:Cèntim de:Cent (Währung) et:Sent es:Centavo eo:Cendo fr:Cent (monnaie) ka:ცენტი ko:센트 it:Cent (moneta) he:סנט (מטבע) hu:Cent nl:Cent (munteenheden) ja:通貨の補助単位 no:Cent pl:Cent ru:Цент sv:Cent (valuta) | ||||||||||||


