How To Use Deutschmark In A Sentence

  • US investors anticipate that the Deutschmark will, in the long term, depreciate relative to the dollar.
  • Maybe, there will be a favorable movement in exchange rates between Deutschmark and the US dollar.
  • Last week, a venerable Sevilian was found complaining that she saw no reason to give up the peseta and accept the Deutschmark.
  • In Maastricht, Dutch Guilders, Deutschmarks and Belgian Francs are all considered legal tender.
  • Men would turn up with hold-alls and shoeboxes piled with notes and turn them into Dutch guilders, Deutschmarks or, latterly, euros.
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  • Much of the earlier strong performance of the Dutch economy was due to a decision in the early 1980s to link the guilder to the Deutschmark through the European Exchange Rate Mechanism.
  • This combined in the autumn of 1981 with a revival in the fortunes of the Deutschmark.
  • Francs, Deutschmarks, guilders, punts, drachmas and pesetas will all have gone by the end of February.
  • The Deutschmark will be dumped, the lire lost, the punt punted, and the franc will be well finished.
  • In the case of Estonia, for instance, eight Estonian kroons are covered by one Deutschmark.
  • The pound held firm against the Deutschmark today.
  • He had come to discuss the Big One, the euro, which could become legal tender everywhere from the Shetlands to Sardinia, subsuming the pound, the Deutschmark, the franc and other EU currencies.
  • Contributions from the Postwar Fund were limited to renewable annual grants of two million Deutschmarks, which the Finance Ministry considered a strain on the federal budget.
  • The pound slumped to 2.47 against the Deutschmark.
  • Francs, Deutschmarks, guilders, punts, drachmas and pesetas will all have gone by the end of February.
  • In October 1981 the Deutschmark and the Dutch guilder were revalued, while the French franc and the lira were devalued.
  • Under the old regime there was the real possibility that the lira would depreciate against the Deutschmark.
  • It seems that the source of Herman's queasiness is rooted in concerns about the property market in Southern Europe, many having holiday homes in the Med; growing commentary on the decline of Southern Europe's economies; a growing crescendo of remarks from Southern Eurpean politicians that are perceived as threatening the independence of the European Central Bank, a sine qua non for Germans to give up the Deutschmark; and a sudden ramping up of German inflation to an official 8.1% (which, if our own experience is anything to go by significantly underplays the reality). Archive 2008-06-08

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