Sedunnic tenn (Pacifica)
| Sedunnic tenn | |
|---|---|
| Sedunnjā Tenn (Sedunnic) | |
Sedunnic Tenn banknotes and coins | |
| Currency Code | |
| Code | TEN |
| Denominations | |
| Subunit | |
| 1/100 | Dov |
| Plural | Tennlē (definitive Tennled) |
| Dov | Dovlē (definitive Dovled) |
| Symbol | ⴀ or Tn |
| Nickname | Jav, Onn, Leved (100 Tn) |
| Banknotes | 10, 20, 50, 100 Tn |
| Coins | 1, 2, 5 Tn, 10, 50 Dovlē |
| Demographics | |
| Official user(s) | |
| Unofficial user(s) | |
| Issuance | |
| Central bank | Sedunnō Karelklajj |
| Printer | VSK |
| Mint | Ried |
| Valuation | |
| Inflation | 0.7% |
The tenn (Sedunnic: [ten̪ː]) (symbol: ⴀ or Tn; code: TEN), plural tennlē, is the official currency of Sedunn. It is an important international reserve currency and is widely used in international transactions. It used extensively in Transsuneria as an auxiliary currency; the Transsunerian dollar is also pegged to the tenn. The tenn is a free-floating currency and is subdivided into 100 dovlē. In Austral, the currency is often called tenlay as an approximation of the Sedunnic pronunciation of the plural form, regardless of the amount. The name translates into Austral as copper. The tenn has been in use since antiquity in various forms.
The currency is managed and administered by the Sedunnic Central Bank. The current banknotes and coins were introduced in 2002.
The symbol ⴀ is a combination of the two Salana letters for T (the initial of the name) and /ɛ/ (a letter lost since the inception of the currency, signifying its old roots). It is also designed to look like a combination of the modern letters T and n, approximating the alternative symbol Tn.