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CENTIME

'Centime' (from Latin ''centesimus'') is French for "cent", and is used in English as the name of the fraction currency in several Francophone countries (including Switzerland, Algeria, Belgium, Morocco and France).
In France the usage of ''centime'' goes back to the introduction of the decimal monetary system under Napoleon. This system aimed at replacing non-decimal fractions of older coins. A five-centime coin was known as a ''sou'', i.e. a solidus or shilling.
Conversely in Quebec, 1/100 of a Canadian dollar is called ''sou'' (penny).

Contents
Subdivision of euro: cent or centime?
Usage
Current
Obsolete

Subdivision of euro: cent or centime?


In the European community ''cent'' is the official name for 1/100 of a euro. However, in French-speaking countries the word ''centime'' is the one preferentially used. Indeed, the Conseil supérieur de la langue française of Belgium recommends in 2001 the use of ''centime'', since the word ''cent'' has two meanings ("cent" and "hundred"). An analogous decision is published in Journal officiel in France (December 2, 1997).
In Morocco, dirhams are divided into 100 ''centime''s and one may find prices in the country quoted in ''centime''s rather than in dirhams. Sometimes ''centime''s are known as francs or in former Spanish areas, pesetas.

Usage


Centime is one hundredth of the following basic monetary units:
Current


Algerian dinar

Burundian franc

CFP franc

CFA franc

Comorian franc

Congolese franc

Djiboutian franc

Ethiopian birr (as santim)

Guinean franc

Haitian gourde

Latvian lats (Latvian: santīms)

Moroccan dirham

Rwandan franc

Swiss franc (by French speakers only)
Obsolete


Algerian franc

Belgian franc

Cambodian franc

French Camerounian franc

French Guianan franc

French franc

Guadeloupe franc

Katangan franc

Luxembourgish franc

Malagasy franc

Malian franc

Martinique franc

Monegasque franc

Moroccan franc

New Hebrides franc

Réunion franc

Tunisian franc

Westphalian frank

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