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    English missing

    Zahlen schreiben auf Englisch mit Euro. €40, € 400.000, € 2,3 billion

    Subject

    Zahlen schreiben auf Englisch mit Euro. €40, € 400.000, € 2,3 billion

    Sources
    Wie schreibe ich Zahlen auf Englisch richtig?

    Heißt es

    €40 oder € 40 [Leerzeichen eingefügt]
    €400.000 oder € 4000000 [Darf man Punkte einfügen?]
    € 2,3 billion oder € 2.3 billion [Punkte oder Zahlen als Trenner?]
    AuthorSally Sulhanen (766041) 01 Apr 12, 19:45
    Comment
    1) Es gibt kein Leerzeichen dazwischen: €40
    2) Man fügt ein Komma ein: €400,000
    3) In diesem Fall benutzt man einen Punkt: €2.3 billion
    #1Author wupper (354075) 01 Apr 12, 19:51
    SuggestionAlles klar.
    Sources
    Vielen Dank, wupper!
    #2AuthorSally Sulhanen (766041) 01 Apr 12, 19:54
    Sources
    http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schreibweise_von...

    http://www.schreibbuero-schreibarbeiten.de/ht...

    http://www.translationdirectory.com/article167.htm

    When an amount is mentioned, place the accepted abbreviation before the figure, leaving a space between the abbreviation for a currency and the amount, unless the abbreviation includes a currency symbol

    Belgian franc BEF 10.00
    Euro EUR 10.00
    U.S. dollar USD 10.00

    http://www.economist.com/style-guide/currencies

    Comment
    #3Author Pachulke (286250) 01 Apr 12, 21:07
    Comment
    re #3: You can use the three-letter abbreviation if you have to -- for example, in a context with a limited character set such as a telegram, or in a financial table or database that includes many world currencies whose symbols are not well known.

    But in normal English text, such as essays, articles, and headlines, you should always use the symbol ($, £, €) for the euro, pound, and dollar.
    #4Author hm -- us (236141) 02 Apr 12, 01:17
    Comment
    You can use the three-letter abbreviation if you have to -- for example, in a context with a limited character set such as a telegram, or in a financial table or database that includes many world currencies whose symbols are not well known.

    The three-letter abbreviations are standardised currency symbols for any financial text.
    http://www.xe.com/currency/eur-euro


    But in normal English text, such as essays, articles, and headlines, you should always use the symbol ($, £, €) for the euro, pound, and dollar.

    The Economist always writes it out: euros, not €
    #5Author penguin (236245) 04 Apr 12, 07:38
    Comment
    Sorry, I meant if you need to use an abbreviation, it should be the usual one, i.e., the symbol, not the three-letter code. There's no need to avoid the symbol unless there's some reason your character set doesn't contain it.
    #6Author hm -- us (236141) 04 Apr 12, 18:25
     
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