Japanese Yen

Is there any sub-division of Japanese Yen - such as “Yen Cents” or the like ???

Please advise - and give URLs if possible…

Thanks

The Sen is essentially an archaic division of the yen - 100 Sen = 1 Yen. It isn’ t used now, except in money markets and AKAIK no Sen coins are currently in circulation. The smallest coin in common current usage is the 1 Yen, worth approxiamtely .87 cents.

http://www.japan-zone.com/new/money.shtml

1 Yen = 100 Sen.

In case anyone’s wondering why you so often see “Japanese Yen” when only Japan uses the Yen, that’s because only Japan pronounces it Yen. It’s the same character for the Korean Won and, IIRC, the Chinese Yuan.

Thank you very much.

Regards,

1 yen = 100 sen
1 sen = 10 ri

Both the sen and ri are still used when describing exchange rates and prices of non-discrete items (electricity, natural gas, etc).

Funny thing is that japanese prnouce it more like “em”, not “yen”. Go fig.

It used to be the same character. At 13 strokes, however, it was simplified by both China and Japan, but unlike some other characters the simplified forms are radically different. Which means that there are three characters: the Chinese yuan, the Japanese en, and the original form.

To complicate things a bit further, the Chinese simplifed their currency character by replacing it with a simpler homophonous character that meant “origin”. This leads to some confusion as the two remain separate in Japan and are read differently. The result being that while in China, the yen is refered to as Riben yuan (Japanese yuan), the Chinese yuan is called gen in Japanese, following the pronounciation of the “origin” character.

As for smiling bandit question, the sci.lang.japan covers this well:

Aaargh! I meant to type:

the sci.lang.japan FAQ covers this well.