Find the word definition

Crossword clues for escudo

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
escudo
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ I pulled out some escudos to pay for it, and told him to take it home.
▪ She may not be able to read or write but she can convert dollars, francs, rand, etc into escudos!
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
escudo

Spanish and Portuguese coin, 1821, from Spanish/Portuguese escudo, from Latin scutum "shield" (see escutcheon). Also compare ecu.

Wiktionary
escudo

n. 1 The state currency formerly used in Portugal, divided into 100 centavos. The symbol is $. 2 The currency formerly used in Chile and replaced by the Peso. 3 The current currency of Cape Verde

WordNet
escudo
  1. n. formerly the basic monetary unit of Portugal; equal to 100 centavo [syn: Portuguese escudo]

  2. the basic unit of money on Cape Verde; equal to 100 centavos [syn: Cape Verde escudo]

Wikipedia
Escudo

The escudo ( Portuguese: "shield") was a unit of currency historically used in Portugal and in their colonies in South America, Asia, and Africa. It was originally worth 16 silver reais. The Cape Verdean escudo and the former Portuguese escudo (PTE), each subdivided into 100 centavos, are named after the historical currency.

Usage examples of "escudo".

His Renamo pay was the equivalent of a rand a day, paid in Mozambican escudos.

Buried under the earthen floor of his hut was nearly a thousand silver Portuguese escudos and half again as many golden Deutschmarks.

Some of this had been expended on the hire of canoes to cross the Rovuma, but there was still eighty escudos left.

Entre un nicho y otro, los muros aparecían cubiertos de tapices de terciopelo negro, y entre éstos colgaban escudos y armas cruzadas con formas fantásticas.

Aparecían en los escudos de los guardias que se encontraban en las puertas y en la parte delantera de sus cascos de bronce.

The agent joined them there after a few minutes and while the girl kept watch at the door, to warn them of a surprise raid by the colonial police, the man handed Moses the travel documents he had prepared for him, a small bundle of second-hand clothing, and sufficient escudos to see him across the border and as far as the Witwatersrand gold-mines.