Deutschmark: Difference between revisions

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The '''Deutsche Mark''', in English usually 'Deutschmark', ([[IPA]] [[British English|BrE]] /'dɔɪtʃmɑk/), or simply 'Mark', was the currency of [[Germany]] from 1948 until it adopted the [[euro]] in 2001.  One mark (in German capitalised: Mark) was divided into 100 pfennings (Pfenninge).
The '''Deutsche Mark''', in English usually 'Deutschmark', ([[IPA]] [[British English|BrE]] /'dɔɪtʃmɑk/), or simply 'mark', was the currency of [[Germany]] from 1948 until it adopted the [[euro]] in 2001.  One mark (in German capitalised: Mark) was divided into 100 pfennings (Pfenninge).

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The Deutsche Mark, in English usually 'Deutschmark', (IPA BrE /'dɔɪtʃmɑk/), or simply 'mark', was the currency of Germany from 1948 until it adopted the euro in 2001. One mark (in German capitalised: Mark) was divided into 100 pfennings (Pfenninge).