Cent (currency)


The cent, commonly represented by the cent sign is a monetary unit of many national currencies that equals of the basic monetary unit. Etymologically, the word cent derives from the Latin word centum meaning hundred.
Cent also refers to a coin worth one cent. The United States 1¢ coin is generally known by the nickname "penny", alluding to the British coin and unit of that name. Canada ended production of their 1¢ coin in 2012.

Symbol

The cent may be represented by the cent sign, written in various ways according to the national convention and font choice. Most commonly seen forms are a minuscule letter c crossed by a diagonal stroke or a vertical line, with a tick above and [|below], or by a simple c, depending on the currency. Cent amounts from 1 to 99 can be represented as one or two digits followed by the appropriate abbreviation, or as a subdivision of the base unit In some countries, longer abbreviations like "ct." are used. Languages that use other alphabets have their own abbreviations and conventions.
The cent sign appeared as the shift of the 6 key on American manual typewriters, but that position has been taken over by the caret on computer keyboards. The character can still be created in most common code pages, including Unicode and Windows-1252:
When written in English, the cent sign follows the amount for example, 2¢ and $0.02, or 2c and €0.02.

Usage

Minor currency units called ''cent'' or similar names

Examples of currencies around the world featuring centesimal units called cent, or related words from the same root such as céntimo, centésimo, centavo or sen, are:
Examples of currencies featuring centesimal units not called cent
Major unitDivided into
British pound100 pence since 1971
Bulgarian lev100 stotinki
Cyrillic: стотинки
Chinese Yuan/Renminbi100 fēn ; in general usage, divided into 10 jiǎo.
Croatian kuna100 lipa
Danish krone100 øre
Estonian mark100 penni
Indian rupee100 paise
Israeli new shekel100 agorot
Macau pataca100 avos; circulating coins are 10, 20, and 50 avos.
Macedonian denar100 deni
Mongolian tögrög100 möngö
Norwegian krone100 øre
Pakistani rupee100 paise
Polish złoty100 groszy
Romanian and Moldovan leu100 bani
Russian ruble100 kopeks
Saudi riyal100 halalas
Serbian dinar100 paras
Swedish krona100 öre
Swiss francGerman: 100 Rappen
French: 100 centimes
Italian: 100 centesimi
Romansch: 100 raps
Thai baht100 satang
Turkish Lira100 kuruş
United Arab Emirates dirham100 fils
Ukrainian hryvnia100 kopijkas.

Obsolete centesimal currency units

Examples of currencies which formerly featured centesimal units but now have no fractional denomination in circulation:
Examples of currencies which use the cent symbol for other purposes: