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
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.
Some pictures on the wikipedia page
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro
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.
How does euro money picture look
It is called euro
Dutch money is the Euro now, it used to be the Gulden.
Ireland uses the euro and all euro notes are the same. Irish euro coins have the harp on one side and the main euro design on the other.
The related links below show pictures of what the Euro notes and coins look like.
The same as every other euro,
It looks like the Euro, Italy is part of the EU (European Union) and they all use the same currency
Like this:€
I Have No Idea look on google euro
Ireland uses the Euro. See the images below for what it looks like.
England doesn't use Euro. They use pounds.
The Euro is used in Germany. The paper bills are colored with pictures of famous Europeans. The coins have the Euro symbol on one side and a famous national landmark on the other side.