English to Spanish Dictionary bolivars

bolivars

Bolívares
translation of 'bolivars'
noun
bolívar
example
Venezuela owed about sixty-two million 'bolivars' to an impatient consortium headed by Great Britain and Germany.
‘Our monthly costs are 10 million 'bolivars' , but at the moment we're just surviving on love,’ she said.
The government raised spending 60 percent in the month from November 2003 to 6.6 trillion 'bolivars' , the central bank said.
Spending rose 62 percent in August to 4.2 trillion 'bolivars' compared with the same month a year ago.
Finally, they raise an issue as to the date at which the loss, which was originally sustained in 'bolivars' , should be converted into United States dollars for the purposes of the policy.
Venezuela has presented them a bill for 281 billion 'bolivars' in back-taxes spanning three years, company officials said on Friday.
"Some of my friends are doing it too," said Villalobos, who stands for hours under the tropical sun, holding up a string of fish he sells for 1,000 'bolivars' .
Lending by Venezuela's 49 banks and financial institutions rose 9.4 percent to 24.1 trillion 'bolivars' .
We aren't giving resources to the private sector so they can charge millions of 'bolivars' to the poor people who can't pay.
Venezuela's minimum wage is 247,600 'bolivars' .
Meanwhile rumours of an imminent devaluation of the 'bolivar' has contributed to further inflation.
The leading losers against the dollar were the Uruguay peso, Venezuelan 'bolivar' , Chilean peso, Brazil real, Mexican peso, Argentine peso, and the Peruvian new sol.
He said it expects the same effect from exchange rates for the current fiscal year, mostly because of the dollar's decline against the pound and currencies such as Nigeria's naira and the Venezuelan 'bolivar' .
In addition, it is claimed that Venezuela's currency, the 'bolivar' , is overvalued by as much as 50 per cent.
This allowed him to devalue the 'bolivar' and successfully attack the problem of the country's internal indebtedness.
He denounced the government's decision to float Venezuela's currency, the 'bolivar' , and to cut next year's budget.
If you see a woman walking down the street in spike heels and a skirt so tight that it must have been poured on and left to set, you can bet your bottom 'bolivar' that she's on her way to the office.
High amounts of crude exports artificially boosted the 'bolivar' making imports cheap and destroying local industry.
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