The Bahraini dinar is the official money used in Bahrain, a country in the Persian Gulf. It matters because it's essential for buying and selling goods and services within the country, and its value affects trade and the economy of Bahrain.
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The dinar (Arabic: دينار بحريني, romanized: Dīnār Baḥrēnī) (sign: .د.ب or BD; code: BHD) is the currency of Bahrain. It is divided into 1000 fils (فلس). The Bahraini dinar is abbreviated د.ب (Arabic) or BD (Latin). It is usually represented with three decimal places denoting the fils.
The name dinar derives from the Roman denarius.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).