Get Free Checker
[ US /ˈkɝənsi/ ]
[ UK /kˈʌɹənsi/ ]
NOUN
  1. general acceptance or use
    the currency of ideas
  2. the property of belonging to the present time
    the currency of a slang term
  3. the metal or paper medium of exchange that is presently used

How To Use currency In A Sentence

  • Within five years, a unified currency in 1933 the "central" issue of "legal tender" currency has been relatively stable, so Donglai Bank has to resume business.
  • But for the watermark, the thickness of the paper and the missing security thread, the note, reportedly obtained from a private bank, looked like genuine currency for all practical purposes.
  • They contended that many foreign central banks were willing to absorb all the foreign currency earned by their exporting sectors that was not willingly held by their private sector in US dollar denominated assets.
  • The value of the coffee becomes significantly higher when expressed in foreign currency.
  • The currency fund can be leveraged up to five times the value of its underlying assets.
  • Hunt thinks it unlikely that the currency will break parity with the dollar next year, and feels it is likely to settle around the $0.92 level.
  • Here we may be sneering at the devaluation of the single currency, but in Germany they're laughing all the way to the export markets.
  • Capital controls would be lifted, at which point the currency would devalue further. Times, Sunday Times
  • What was supposedly impossible, rapid large swings in currency values, became an almost everyday event.
  • The currency had already been weakened after China carried out the biggest devaluation in two decades last year. Times, Sunday Times
View all