Russia's ruble also has come under extreme pressure during the financial crisis.
From the kentucky.com
The ruble now trades inside a 26 to 41 band that the bank has pledged to defend.
From the bloomberg.com
By 1994, inflation had risen 224 percent and the ruble had gone down 27 percent.
From the denverpost.com
In a 1704 currency reform, Peter I standardized the ruble to 28 grams of silver.
From the en.wikipedia.org
A series of circulating Olympic commemorative 25 ruble coins will start in 2011.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The ruble appreciated 1.5 percent, the most since Aug. 13, to 44.2469 per euro.
From the bloomberg.com
The 30-stock ruble-denominated Micex Index rose 10 percent to 618.28 in Moscow.
From the bloomberg.com
The ruble is sliding along with the price of oil, Russia's chief export earner.
From the bloomberg.com
After that, the ruble will start losing weight, along with people's real incomes.
From the fresnobee.com
More examples
The basic unit of money in Tajikistan
The ruble or rouble (/u02C8ruu02D0bu0259l/; Russian: u0440u0443u0431u043Bu044C; IPA:u00A0) is or was a currency unit of a number of countries in Eastern Europe closely associated with the economy of Russia. Originally, the ruble was the currency unit of Imperial Russia, and it is currently the currency unit of Belarus, Russia and the partially recognised states of Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Transnistria...
The ruble (French-derived transliteration rouble), a monetary unit of Russia, Belarus and Transnistria equal to 100 kopeks
The monetary unit of the Soviet Union; divided into 100 kopeks. The official Soviet exchange rate was 0.61 ruble per US$1 (1988 average). The black market rate varied from 4 to 6 rubles per US$1 in 1988. The ruble has historically not been considered hard currency (q.v.).
Basic currency unit for the Russian monetary system
What's left over after a bank is demolished is ruble.
Unti of currency of Georgia, Kazakhstan, Republic of kyrgyz, Russia, Tajikstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.
The basic monetary unit of Russia, the Soviet Union, and its successor states, being a silver or copper-alloy coin that's equal to 100 KOPECKs; also spelled "rouble", as derived from "stump" or "plug", originally denoting a piece cut from a silver bar. See LEGAL TENDER.
Monetary unit of the Soviet Union, which in mid-1989 had an exchange rate of US$1 to Ruble 0.63.