Euro Swiss Franc Czech Koruna Danish Krone Pound Sterling Hungarian Forint Icelandic Krona Latvian Lats Lithuanian Litas Norwegian Krone Polish Zloty Romanian Leu Russian Rouble Swedish Krona Ukraine Hryvnia
Barbadian Dollar Canadian Dollar Jamaican Dollar Mexican Peso Panamanian Balboa United States Dollar
Chinese Yuan Hong Kong Dollar Indonesian Rupiah Indian Rupee Japanese Yen South Korean Won Sri Lankan Rupee Malaysian Ringgit Nepalese Rupee Philippine Peso Pakistani Rupee Singapore Dollar Thai Baht Turkish New Lira Vietnamese Dong Taiwanese Dollar
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The peso was originally established as the nuevo peso argentino or peso convertible, and the symbol used locally for it is $. To avoid confusion, Argentines frequently use US$, U$, U$S, or U$A to indicate U.S. dollars.
A variety of currencies circulated in China during the Republic of China era, most of which were denominated in the unit 'yuan'. In 1948 the People's Bank of China issued a unified currency known as the Renminbi or 'people's currency'. Yuan in Chinese literally means a 'round object' or 'round coin'.
1 ARS = 1.4494 CNY
Argentinian PesoChinese Yuan