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Science Forum Index » Language Translation Forum » Found bank note:
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| mholt@ohiohills.com |
Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 1:37 pm |
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Guest
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A friend sent this message from Germany, where he's living in expat
splendor:
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Well, inside the book was a banknote I've seen before, origin unclear:
Could be Nordic?
Yogoslav?
It's for a hundred of summat, the Bank E SHQIPERISE
In larger letter writ both sides is: NJEMIJE LEKE
Should I paste it in one of my books as an historical keepsake or am I
rich?
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What has he found? Shall I tell him to retire?
Thanks.
M |
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| Jean Munier |
Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 1:54 pm |
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<mholt@ohiohills.com> wrote in message
news:1169055435.320235.123240@s34g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Quote: A friend sent this message from Germany, where he's living
in expat
splendor:
========================================================
Well, inside the book was a banknote I've seen before,
origin unclear:
Could be Nordic?
Yogoslav?
It's for a hundred of summat, the Bank E SHQIPERISE
In larger letter writ both sides is: NJEMIJE LEKE
Should I paste it in one of my books as an historical
keepsake or am I
rich?
==========================================================
What has he found? Shall I tell him to retire?
Thanks.
M
A quick search in Google on "njemije leke" shows it's
Albanian. Nothing to retire on.
J. |
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| Jean Munier |
Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2007 2:00 pm |
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"Jean Munier">
Quote:
A quick search in Google on "njemije leke" shows it's
Albanian. Nothing to retire on.
J.
Go to http://www.banknotes.com/al.htm then click on [Obverse
and Reverse] of the 1000 Leke note you want (various dates
of issue).
J. |
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| mholt@ohiohills.com |
Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 1:42 pm |
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Thanks.
He'd not handed in his retirement form.
M |
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| Harlan Messinger |
Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 2:09 pm |
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mholt@ohiohills.com wrote:
Quote: A friend sent this message from Germany, where he's living in expat
splendor:
========================================================
Well, inside the book was a banknote I've seen before, origin unclear:
Could be Nordic?
Yogoslav?
It's for a hundred of summat, the Bank E SHQIPERISE
"Shqipėria" is Albanian for "Albania". |
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| Jean Munier |
Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 3:03 pm |
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"Harlan Messinger"
Quote:
"Shqipėria" is Albanian for "Albania".
And more Google:
In http://www.blinkbits.com/en_wikifeeds/Eagle
one can read:
<Quote>
Albania. The two-headed eagle is the emblem of "Shqipėria"
or Land of the Eagles, which is known in English as Albania
(see The Tale of the Eagle for the legendary origin of the
name)
</Quote>
I guess that "Albania" comes from the Latin "albus"
(feminine "alba") meaning white.
J. |
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