Fils (currency)

The fils (Arabic: فلس) is a subdivision of currency used in many Arab countries, such as Kuwait, Iraq and Bahrain. The term is a modern retranscription of fals, an early medieval Arab coin.

"Fils" is the singular form in Arabic, not plural (as its final consonant might indicate to an English speaker). The plural form of fils is fulūs (فلوس); the latter term can also refer to small amounts of money or to money in general in Egyptian Arabic and many other varieties of Arabic.

100 Fils (Bahrain).
Obverse: A palm tree with lettering "حكومة البحرين" (Government of Bahrain) and year of minting in Gregorian and Islamic years (1965-1385) inscribed in Arabic. Reverse: Face-value and country name.
8,312,000 coins minted in 1965

Indian rupees

gollark: 鵔啥𒁣ꕭ𐙵𓅩啴驲𒁶𓍬鹴𐙯鸠啳𐙩𔑥𓉩靡马售鵔𓅩鸠啳啡𒁬鱮ꔠ𓅥陳驧𓈠啯驴𓉳霠𓅡啥樶栵唶𓍦𓉲驨啲𒁦啲𒁮鰠𒁯啤驲𓅡𐙯ᔮ
gollark: 鵔𓅩鸠啳𒁮啷𐙩霠𓅡啥樶栵挶
gollark: It basically ternarizes individual bytes into 6... trytes?
gollark: I should really work out a better encoding though.
gollark: Oh, you've deemojized my messages.
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