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France uses Euros, which vary according to the country of issue, though you can spend them anywhere in the Eurozone. Americans immediately notice 2 things about euro notes:

1) Different denominations are different colours, so you can tell them apart at a glance.

2) Different denominations are different sizes, so blind people can tell them apart, too.

3) Different denominations have different designs, so you don't get bored.

Neat ideas, huh?

For the actual appearance, the European Central Bank has a useful leaflet, which you can see on http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/other/euroleafleten.pdf

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12y ago
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Wiki User

15y ago

France uses euros like most other states in the EU, so there is no longer such a thing as "French money".

There are pictures at many sites - see the related links below.

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Wiki User

15y ago

Some pictures on the wikipedia page

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro

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10y ago

Europe has over 50 countries and most have their own currencies. 17 countries use the Euro. Within each country that uses the Euro the notes are the same but coins can be different.

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Q: What is euro money look like?
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