koruna - meaning and definition. What is koruna
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What (who) is koruna - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Koruna (disambiguation); Koruny; Koruna (currency); Korun (currency)

koruna         
['k?r?n?, k?'ru:n?]
¦ noun the basic monetary unit of the Czech Republic and Slovakia, equal to 100 halers or haliers.
Origin
Czech, lit. 'crown'.
Banknotes of the Czechoslovak koruna (1919)         
The first banknotes in First Czechoslovak Republic were issues of the Austro-Hungarian Bank to which adhesive stamps were affixed. Denominations were of 10, 20, 50, 100 and 1000 korun (provisional issue).
Coins of the Czechoslovak koruna (1953)         
After the monetary reform in Czechoslovakia, 1953 a new series of coins were introduced. Coins were first issued in denominations of 1, 3, 5, 10, 25 h – the 1, 3 and 5 Kčs denominations only existed as paper money (state notes).

Wikipedia

Koruna
Examples of use of koruna
1. The former is expected to hit 7.5 per cent in 2007. ×Slovakian koruna.
2. It also plans to borrow at least 1 billion Czech koruna ($40 million). A basis point is 0.01 percentage points.
3. However, as before, the sell–off reverberated far afield, with the Polish zloty falling 1.4 per cent to a three–month low of 3.'012 zlotys to the euro, the Hungarian forint off 1.5 per cent at a two–year low of Ft258.'1, the Czech koruna down 1 per cent at Kc28.843 and the Slovak koruna losing 0.' per cent at SK37.718.
4. The dollar is weak against all currencies: the euro, the pound sterling, the Brazilian real and the Indian rupee, Poland‘s zloty and the Czech Koruna.
5. By March 1''3, Harvards holdings were worth 165 billion Czech koruna ($5.8 billion), more than 30 times the original value of the vouchers hed collected.