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Its name lives on in the many currencies called dollar and until recently, the Slovenian tolar.
I don’t think there is much nostalgia for the Slovenian tolar any more, although people still calculate prices into our old currency in everyday life.
Ljubljana’s market traders swapped the Slovenian tolar for the euro on 1 January 2007.
The Slovenian tolar had the same etymological origin as dollar (that is, thaler).
Slovenia replaced its previous currency, the Slovenian tolar, with the euro in January 2007.
(b) Key indicators of exchange rate pressure for the Slovenian tolar (average of three-month period ending in specified month) Dec.
In order to extend the scope of this Regulation to the Slovenian tolar, a reference to this currency needs to be added to this Regulation.
We have to become better at things like research and the trading of exotic currencies" like the Polish zloty, Slovenian tolar and Indonesian rupiah.
I refigured the conversion rate from Slovenian tolar into dollars on my pocket calculator, because I wasn't sure I'd heard her right - $218 for an all-inclusive week?
On the same day, the ECOFIN Council adopted a regulation fixing the irrevocable conversion rate between the Slovenian tolar and the euro.
The Slovenian tolar ceased to participate in EMS II as Slovenia joined the euro zone on 1 January 2007.
In case of a positive decision, the Council will subsequently have to adopt the conversion rate between the euro and the Slovenian tolar which will take effect from 1 January 2007.
The euro central rates and compulsory intervention rates for the Danish krone, the Estonian kroon, the Lithuanian litas and the Slovenian tolar remain unchanged.
In the context of ERM II entry, Banka Slovenije smoothly discontinued the gradual trend depreciation of the Slovenian tolar against the euro.
The Slovenian tolar has been participating in ERM II for around 22 months, i.e. for less than two years prior to the examination by the ECB.
CHAPTER 1 Table 10 Slovenian tolar: real exchange rate developments (monthly data; percentage deviations; April 2006 compared with different benchmark periods) Average Jan.
• 20 Opinion on the conversion rate between the euro and the Slovenian tolar and on other measures necessary for the introduction of the euro in Slovenia (CON/2006/36)
The Proposal [Consultation of the European Central Bank CNB/2006/0110 ] extends the scope of the Regulation to the Slovenian tolar by adding a reference to this currency.
The Danish krone, the Estonian kroon, the Cyprus pound, the Latvian lats, the Lithuanian litas, the Maltese lira and the Slovenian tolar were very stable against the euro in 2006.
The three currencies participating in ERM II, namely the Estonian kroon, the Lithuanian litas and the Slovenian tolar, have traded continuously at or close to their central rates since joining the mechanism.
The former members of ERM II are the Greek drachma, Slovenian tolar, Cypriot pound, Estonian kroon, Maltese lira, Slovak koruna, Lithuanian litas and Latvian lats.
Nevertheless, the real exchange rate of the Slovenian tolar – both bilaterally against the euro and in effective terms – stood in September 2004 close to historical averages as calculated from the first quarter of 1996 and since the launch of the euro (see Table 10).