0
1rials. 2 rials. 5 rials. 10 rials. 20 rials. 50 rials. 100 rials. 250 rials. 500 rials. 1000 Rials.
The new rials in 2000 and 5000.
1 answer
What is the value of two hunderd rials from central
Bank of yemen
2 answers
Today, 1000 rials is worth only $00.10. During the era of the Shah, however, 1000 rials was the equivalent of $14.30.
6 answers
the answer is 5 divided by 3.75 which is (on my calculator) 1.33
1 answer
10,000 Qatari Rials is 2744.61 US Dollars per the current currency exchange climate. You weren't specific enough on what country's dollars you wanted converted so I'd recommend using Google to search up the current currency conversion between the rial and the country's dollar you were looking for.
2 answers
Islam is a religion, not a country, and religions don't have a currency.
2 answers
Probably a variant spelling of English Ryalls, itself a variant of Ryle.
1 answer
i bought mine long time ago with about 75 rials
1 answer
Yemen, officially known as the Republic of Yemen, is an Arab country in Western Asia.
The rial or riyal is the currency of Yemen.
The international trading code is YER.
5 answers
100 Omani Rials converts to 974.04 Saudi Riyals. Since the Baisa is 1/1000 Rials, 100 Omani Baisa would convert to 0.97404 Saudi Riyals, roughly 1 Saudi Riyal.
2 answers
Rial, but because of the low value of the money you count them in tomans
1 toman = 10 rials
1 answer
It depends on 2.75 crore what. Yen, Rials, Indian or Pakistani Rupees, etc.
1 answer
The 1000 Rials note issued between 1974-79 featuring a portrait of Shah Pahlavi on the front is worth $35 in uncirculated condition. There is a rare exception which has a yellow security thread and the signatures of Mohammad Yeganeh and Hushang Ansary - this is worth $110.
2 answers
it was actually..about 230 rials last year..this year i donno..
@Shijin Abdul Latheef
1 answer
Yes you can not take iranian currency more then 100000 rials
for foreign currency no problem
1 answer
The currency of Iran is the Rial. However, most people count in Toman which are 10 rials apiece.
2 answers
The ratio of Omani Rials to US Dollars is>>> 1.0 OMR : 2.59723394585 USD .....As of today (Rates are always changing)
1 answer
one million Omani rials = 2.5972 million U.S. dollars
1 answer
Rials is the official term used for Iran's national currency (abbreviated IRR), but people prefer to use the word Toman instead of Rial as if it were a different currency (it is not). Each Toman represents 10 Rials. For example, a piece of bread may cost 500 Rials, but a person will say conversationally, "The bread costs 50 Toman".
As of February 4, 2013, $1.00 USD = 12,282.00 IRR.
The currency used in Iran(which is a purely cash economy) is Iranian rial.
The Iranian currency is the Iranian Rial, or IRR, worth approximately $0.0000959877 US Dollars.
1 answer
5 millon buyned
A cheap flight will probably cost around 2000 Brazilian rials (£800.00sterling)
1 answer
: 1 United States Dollar = 0.38450 Omani Rial
2 answers
The currency system of Iran is very strange. the bills and coins are rials, but when purchasing some thing it is in Toman. The official currency is Toman, but all the bills and coins are rial.
1 answer
Baisa is the currency of Oman, but the current name for it is rials, .015 rial is worth 100 Ugandan shillings. There are many online currency converters available.
1 answer
it doesn't mean much, if an Omani rial is equal to ten Saudi Rials then an Omani's salary would be 1000, where A Saudi would be pain 10000.
1 answer
Rials are the Iranian currency. Currently, the rial is practically worthless because of the West's economic sanctions against Iran. As a result Iran is trying to revalue the rial with limited success.
1 answer
Hi, 1.00 IRR = 0.00468132 INR Iran Rials India Rupees Or 213 Iranian Rials make 1 Rupee. Hope this helps Samsonite India Visit us at samsoniteindia.com Follow us on twitter.com/SamsoniteIndia Fan page on facebook.com/SamsoniteIndia
4 answers
An arbitrageur is one who practices arbitrage. Arbitrage is really weird. It is the SIMULTANEOUS buying and selling of an asset to profit from the price differential. A lot of arbs do this with currency, taking advantage of varying exchange rates. You'd maybe buy Saudi rials with US dollars, yen with your rials, Korean won with your yen, Singapore dollars with won, Canadian dollars with Singapore dollars, euros with your Canadian dollars, pounds with your euros and finally US dollars with your pounds, and if the exchange rates are right you can make lots of money.
1 answer
Exchange rates change almost every day so any conversion factor posted here would be out of date within 24 hours. For the latest rates you can check sites such as www.xe.com or CNNMoney.
1 answer