The basic unit of money in Norway.
The basic unit of money in Denmark.
1Upon my word, I seem to hear a two-krone talking to itself.
2The economy is strong and the krone isn't the euro, but shadows it.
3The krone could rise then sharply -but only in case of disaster.
4I got a krone and a half for a tip.
5They earn one bright krone after another in there.
6One hundred of the copper ore make one krone.
7Fru Kongstrup gave him red-currant wine and cake, and the farmer gave him a two-krone piece.
8Then give me your half-krone, and I'll go to the town and sell them for you.
9Can one of you lend me a krone?
10And eggs, they cost one krone twenty a score where the rich folks buy them-buthere!
11But it warned that a rejection could put the krone under pressure and trigger interest rate increases.
12And if you don't eat breakfast in the hotel they charge you a krone for it anyhow.
13Won't you give me the half-krone, then?
14The krone has risen against the euro by a minuscule 4 cents, less than half of one percent.
15Harmony gave her an extra krone or two out of sheer gratitude, but she could not keep her.
16That beat the average 2.69 billion-krone estimate of eight analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.