The Republic of Ireland uses the Irish pound as its basic unit of currency. Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom, uses both the British pound and Bank of Ireland notes (also pounds).
the euro, like the rest of Europe -
except for the 11 out of 27 states that don't have the euro. It used to be the Punt (or Irish pound) until 2002.
The monetary unit which is used in England is the British pound. The Royal Mint produces the pound and is used in all territories.
The simple answer is that it used to be a colony of Spain and used the Spanish monetary unit which is the Peso as well. In the early 1900's the U.S.A. took control of the Philippines and established the unit of currency as a "gold peso" which was supposed to be 1/2 the value of a U.S. Dollar. The Japanese occupied for a while as well, but the Peso has stuck as the monetary unit
Chinese monetary unit - the monetary unit in the People's Republic of China monetary unit - a unit of money kwai, yuan - the basic unit of money in China jiao - 10 jiao equal 1 yuan in China fen - 100 fen equal 1 yuan in China
Inflation has a lot of impact on monetary unit assumption. Inflation greatly reduces the value of a monetary unit and acts as a hidden tax on consumers.
Dinar
The euro
The monetary unit which is used in England is the British pound. The Royal Mint produces the pound and is used in all territories.
The Euro.
euros
it is Thailand
euros/lira
Cyproit pound
Jamaican Dollars
Northern Ireland as with the rest of the UK will accept sterling and/or Euro
The only monetary unit used and accepted in the Netherlands, like the rest of Europe, is the Euro. Our former monetary unit (used until 2002) was the "gulden" (or guilder, in English). You can no longer use guilders to pay for anything!
The Bermuda Dollar (BMD) is the monetary unit for Bermuda. It is on par with the US Dollar (USD), and both are used and accepted on the island.
Guess what it is not on this page dummy.