Quezal vs Quetzal - What's the difference?
quezal | quetzal |
Any trogon of the genus , which has very long tail feathers and is found in Guatemala and Costa Rica.
* 1997 , Ann Marie Stock, Framing Latin American Cinema: Contemporary Critical Perspectives ,
* 1999 , Sy Barlowe, Learning about Rain Forest Animals ,
* 2005 , Eric Dinerstein, Tigerland and Other Unintended Destinations ,
A monetary unit used in Guatemala, equal to 100 centavos.
* 2005 , Anastasia Xenias, Dollarization: The End of Monetary Pluralism in South America?'', Avery Plaw (editor), ''Frontiers of Diversity: Explorations in Contemporary Pluralism ,
* 2005 , International Monetary Fund, Guatemala: 2005 Article IV Consultation - Staff Report ,
* 2007 , Charles Enoch, Karl Habermeier, Marta de Castello Branco (editors), Building Monetary and Financial Systems: Case Studies in Technical Assistance , International Monetary Fund,
As nouns the difference between quezal and quetzal
is that quezal is (the bird) while quetzal is quetzal (bird) or quetzal can be quetzal (monetary unit).quetzal
English
(wikipedia quetzal) (Guatemalan quetzal)Noun
(en noun)page 80,
- Included among the images that Rigoberta MenchĂș uses in order to subtly convey her people's ethnicity is an image of Guatemala as the "land of the quetzal ."
page 12,
- A strikingly beautiful bird, the quetzal' is the national emblem of Guatemala, appearing on its currency and postage. The ' quetzal ranges from southern Mexico to Costa Rica.
page 65,
- This particular wild avocado species had beautiful small black fruits set in a red cap that made it easy for the quetzals to find them.
page 109,
- In 2002 Guatemala officially declared the U.S. dollar as legal tender to circulate in parallel to the national currency, the quetzal'. This is not likely to last for long as the ' quetzal is not widely accepted and is considered a weak store of value.
unnumbered page,
- In this situation, they chose a policy mix of moderate monetary tightening, tight fiscal policy, and central bank intervention in the foreign exchange market to prevent excessive appreciation of the quetzal , without pursuing an exchange rate target.
page 105,
- To cope with the subsequent mounting pressures on the domestic currency, the Bank of Guatemala (Banguat) started to intervene in the foreign exchange market to moderate the quetzal depreciation and tightened monetary policy.