Céntimo

The céntimo (in Spanish-speaking countries) or cêntimo (in Portuguese-speaking countries) was a currency unit of Spain, Portugal and their former colonies. The word derived from the Latin centimus [1] meaning "hundredth part". The main Spanish currency, before the euro, was the peseta which was divided into 100 céntimos. In Portugal it was the real and later the escudo, until it was also replaced by the euro. In the European community cent is the official name for one hundredth of a euro. However, both céntimo (in Spanish) and cêntimo (in Portuguese) are commonly used to describe the euro cent.

50 Philippines Sentimos.

Current use

Céntimo or cêntimo is one-hundredth of the following basic monetary units:

Portuguese cêntimo

Spanish céntimo

Obsolete

Portuguese cêntimo

Spanish céntimo

gollark: * cool
gollark: Unicode ends up leading to weird security issues in some stuff because it is so extremely complicated to deal with.
gollark: There are even these 𝖜𝖊𝖎𝖗𝖉 𝖋𝖔𝖓𝖙𝖘.
gollark: Praise the Consortium!
gollark: There is unicode for EVERYTHING.

References

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