Euros
in sentence
274 examples of Euros in a sentence
Or give me one million
Euros
and I make a better film than this load of BS!
I bought a DVD collection (9 movies for 10 Euros) where this one was included.
If this is what's best in the Finnish cinema at the moment, I'd say those big tax
euros
spent at supporting "culture" have gone to waste here in a horrible way.
Unfortunately I made a mistake and I paid 7
Euros
at the movie theater to watch this shallow meaningless movie.
This doesn't sit well with his mother and five sisters and to get them off his back he makes an 'arrangement' with the sister of a colleague to pose - for fifteen thousand
euros
-as his new girlfriend, allow the romance to come to fruition with a wedding and then jilt him, thus getting him off the hook.
LOOK should have only cost 100
Euros
to produce 50
Euros
for Mum.
Add that cheesiness to a very bad song that closes the film and you somehow regret you paid 8,50
euros
to have seen it.
This almost-psychedelic mix-version of Cinderella and The Sound of Music are funny and with a lot of references at the actual situation of life in Argentina (ALL the people, including The Rich and The Poor, Bads and Good Guys, are capable of any thing for a couple of Euros, including sleep on the floor and shine shoes).
I watched this movie accidentally and I wish I had saved my
Euros.
I bought it for 3
euros
on DVD so you can't go wrong there.
Hm...u So let me sum it up: Bad characters, bad story because old old story with no fresh material in it, bad actors, movie FULL OF stereotypes (people who smoke weed are like this, cops are like that, people living far from the cities are so AND SO ON!) This equals a bad bad movie which wasn't worth one cent of the 5
Euros
I paid for it!
With central banks seeking an alternative to dollars and euros, isn’t now a perfect time to expand the role of SDRs?
Closer to Britain, the ECB is potentially embarking on a tightening cycle and withdrawing hundreds of billions of
euros
in liquidity provided during the crisis, owing to concerns about “addicted” banks.
If the ECB wants to reduce the value of the euro and increase the eurozone’s near-term inflation rate, the only reliable way to do so may be by direct intervention in the currency market – that is, selling
euros
and buying a basket of other currencies.
Some contracts denominated in
euros
would be subject to Greek law, some to European law, and others – for example, derivatives contracts – to British or US law.
But what if Spain - and Europe as a whole - had reacted in the opposite way to the Madrid train bombing of April, saying: "We promise that because of that slaughter we will double our support for stabilization in Iraq by sending twice as many troops, experts, engineers, teachers, policemen, doctors, and billions of
euros
in support of allied forces and their Iraqi co-workers."
Because all of the accumulated debt is denominated in euros, it makes all the difference which country leaves the euro.
They would also incur losses on their claims and investments denominated in
euros.
Some Europeans suggest that Asian central banks should hold a greater part of their reserves in euros, an echo of the General's unsuccessful attempt to force America to its knees by selling dollars for gold.
Because their currencies are not widely used internationally, many of their bank liabilities are in
euros.
If savers in Portuguese banks start moving their money to Germany, the ECB will recycle these
euros
back to Portugal through interbank deposits.
But one can envisage a system in which international reserves are held each in roughly equal shares of dollars,
euros
(assuming a further gradual increase in its share), and SDRs.
In the US, the reason we do not use
euros
or yen in addition to dollars is obvious: doing so would be pointless, and it would make the economy far less efficient.
In Guinea, for example, rights that appear to have been awarded without significant benefit to the public treasury were swiftly re-sold for several billion
euros.
The same sum of
euros
has very different “expected” value in a Portuguese, Italian, Greek, Dutch, or German bank account, because banks in the weaker member states are reliant on bailouts from fiscally stressed governments.
This would move the EU away from the current situation, in which all sovereign bonds denominated in
euros
are treated equally, regardless of the issuer’s debt position.
By continuing to shunt Roma children into “special” schools, where expectations are low and results still lower, EU member states are squandering hundreds of millions of
euros
annually in productivity and tax revenues.
Income disparities have halved both in nominal terms when expressed in
euros
and in real terms when taking into account differences in purchasing power.
The EU spent 9billion
euros
between 1999 and 2002 to prepare Central European and Baltic candidate countries for membership - 10 times the amount it spent on Central Asia's impoverished non-candidate countries.
The EU will spend over 30billion
euros
integrating its new members into the Union.
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