Centavo
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10 Philippine centavos (1945)
Centavo is a Spanish and Portuguese word, derived from the Latin centum, meaning "one hundred", and the suffix -avo, meaning "portion" or "fraction". Centavo means, strictly, "one-hundredth".
It is a fractional monetary unit, used to represent one hundredth of a basic monetary unit in many countries around the world, including:
Circulating
- Argentine peso
 - Bolivian boliviano
 - Brazilian real
 - Cape Verdean escudo
 - Chilean peso (until 1984)
 - Colombian peso
 - Cuban peso
 - Dominican peso
 - East Timor centavo coins
 - Ecuadorian centavo coins
 - Guatemalan quetzal
 - Honduran lempira
 - Mexican peso
 - Mozambican metical
 - Nicaraguan córdoba
 - Philippine peso (In English usage; séntimo (céntimo) is used in Filipino.)
 
Obsolete
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- Brazilian cruzeiro (from 1942 to 1986 and from 1990 to 1993)
 - Brazilian cruzado (from 1986 to 1989)
 - Brazilian cruzado novo (from 1989 to 1990)
 - Costa Rican colón (Between 1917 and 1920 only. As céntimo for other periods.)
 - Ecuadorian sucre (New centavo coins continued to circulate after the sucre was replaced by U.S. dollar in 2000.)
 - Salvadoran colón
 - Guinea Bissau peso
 - Mozambican escudo
 - Portuguese escudo (Before the euro was introduced)
 - Portuguese Guinean escudo
 - Portuguese Indian escudo
 - Puerto Rican peso
 - São Tomé and Príncipe escudo
 - Venezuelan venezolano
 - Venezuelan peso
 
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