" Five hundred and eighty-seven thousand two hundred and ten francs thirty centimes" !
“五十八万七千二百一十法郎三十生丁” !
妇女乐园(上)
" Eighty thousand seven hundred and forty-two francs ten centimes, " replied the cashier.
“八万七百四十二法郎十生丁,”出纳员回答。
欧也妮·葛朗台
" They are worth nine hundred and eighty-nine francs, seventy-five centimes, " said Grandet, opening the door.
“它们值九百八十九法郎七十五生丁,”格朗台说着打开了门。
欧也妮·葛朗台
" But gold is worth thirteen francs fifty centimes." " Say was worth—" " Where the devil have they got any" ?
“但是黄金值十三法郎五十生丁。” “说值得——” “他们到底从哪儿弄来的”?
妇女乐园(上)
" Really! a fine silk at five francs sixty centimes" ! said Madame Bourdelais, enthusiastic. " One can hardly believe it" .
“真的!五法郎六十生丁一条丝绸! ”布尔德莱夫人热情地说。“很难相信” 。
妇女乐园(上)
" It really isn't bad for five francs sixty centimes, " said Madame Desforges, who had succeeded in getting hold of a piece at the edge of the table.
“五法郎六十生丁真的很不错,”德福热夫人说,她成功地拿到了桌边的一块。
红与黑(二)
Logically the grave sounds of the bell should only have recalled to Julien's mind the thought of the labour of twenty men paid fifty-four centimes each, and possibly helped by fifteen or twenty faithful souls.
" Buy soon; you will still make twenty per cent in two years, besides getting an excellent rate of interest, —five thousand a year for eighty thousand francs fifty centimes." " We'll see about that, " answered Grandet, rubbing his chin.
In France the usage of centime goes back to the introduction of the decimal monetary system under Napoleon. This system aimed at replacing non-decimal fractions of older coins. A five-centime coin was known as a sou, i.e. a solidus or shilling.
英语百科
Centime 生丁
Centime (from Latin:centesimus) is French for "cent", and is used in English as the name of the fraction currency in several Francophone countries (including Switzerland, Algeria, Belgium, Morocco and France).
In France the usage of centime goes back to the introduction of the decimal monetary system under Napoleon. This system aimed at replacing non-decimal fractions of older coins. A five-centime coin was known as a sou, i.e. a solidus or shilling.
a fractional monetary unit of several countries: France and Algeria and Belgium and Burkina Faso and Burundi and Cameroon and Chad and the Congo and Gabon and Haiti and the Ivory Coast and Luxembourg and Mali and Morocco and Niger and Rwanda and Senegal and Switzerland and Togo
a coin worth one-hundredth of the value of the basic unit