The Surinamese dollar is the official money used in Suriname, a country in South America. It's important because it's what people in Suriname use for everyday buying and selling of goods and services.
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ISO 4217 CodeSRD (numeric: 968) Subunit0.01 Unit Pluraldollar Symbol$, Sur$ Denominations Subunit 1⁄100cent Plural centcent Banknotes1, 2+1⁄2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500 dollar Coins1, 5, 10, 25, 100, 250 cent Demographics Date of introduction1 January 2004 ReplacedSurinamese guilder User(s)Suriname Issuance Central bankCentral Bank of Suriname Websitewww.cbvs.sr Valuation Inflation62.1% (Feb 2022)
The Surinamese dollar (ISO 4217 code SRD; Sranan Tongo: Sranandala) has been the currency of Suriname since 2004. It is divided into 100 cent. The Surinamese dollar is normally abbreviated with the dollar sign $, or alternatively Sr$ to distinguish it from other dollar-denominated currencies. In spoken Surinamese Dutch, it is widely referred to by its acronym SRD ( Dutch: [ˌɛsɛrˈdeː]), with "dollar" generally being understood as meaning the US dollar.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).