• Rubl

    Origin 1

    From .

    Full definition of rubl

    Noun

    rubl

    (plural rubls)
    1. Alternative form of en.
      • 1902, All the mantles observed in Russia were of German make. They brought a high price at first, about one rubl each, or say about 75 cents, and were eagerly snapped up at that.
      • 1926, List of Foreign Educational Periodicals Other Than Great Britain, France and Germany, 1926, Annually 3 karb (probably meaning the Ukrainan rubl, similar to the Russian rubl and ordinarily 50 cents in American money).
      • 2006, Politics of Oil: A Survey, In 2005 Russia achieved a seventh successive year of economic growth, which has averaged 6.4% annually since the financial crisis of 1998. Although high oil prices and the relatively low value of the Russian rubl have been important drivers of this economic recovery, investment and consumer-driven demand have played a noticeably increasing role since 2000.
      • 2016, The Europa Directory of International Organizations 2016, Decisions taken by the Crimean legislature following the disputed referendum included submitting an application for the territory to join Russia, replacing the Ukrainian currency (hryvnya) with the Russian rubl, and permitting Crimean soldiers to join the Russian military.

    Origin 2

    From .

    Noun

    rubl

    (plural rubls)
    1. Alternative form of en.
      • 1994, The new banknotes are called the rubl (????, vs. the Russian spelling: ?????). Tadzhik rubls will be issued in denominations of R1, R3, R5, R10, R100, R200 and R500 and R1,000.
      • 1995, A national currency, the Tajik rubl, will become the sole legal tender inside the country. One, three, five, 10, 200, 500 and 1,000 Tajik rubl notes have been issued.
      • 2000, Bradley Mayhew; Richard Plunkett; Simon Richmond, Central Asia, The manat, sum, tenge and Tajik rubl are still relatively unstable and so prices quoted in this book are quoted in US dollar equivalents.
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