Ruble sign

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Ruble sign
Punctuation
apostrophe   '
brackets [ ]  ( )  { }  ⟨ ⟩
colon :
comma ,  ،  
dash ‒  –  —  ―
ellipsis   ...  . . .
exclamation mark  !
full stop, period .
guillemets ‹ ›  « »
hyphen
hyphen-minus -
question mark  ?
quotation marks ‘ ’  “ ”  ' '  " "
semicolon ;
slash, stroke, solidus /  
Word dividers
interpunct ·
space     
General typography
ampersand &
asterisk *
at sign @
backslash \
bullet
caret ^
dagger † ‡
degree °
ditto mark
inverted exclamation mark ¡
inverted question mark ¿
note
number sign, pound, hash, octothorpe #
numero sign
obelus ÷
multiplication sign ×
ordinal indicator º ª
percent, per mil  % ‰
plus and minus + −
equals sign =
basis point
pilcrow
prime     
section sign §
tilde ~
underscore, understrike _
vertical bar, pipe, broken bar |    ¦
Intellectual property
copyright ©
sound-recording copyright
registered trademark ®
service mark
trademark
Currency
currency sign ¤

؋฿¢$֏ƒ£元 圆 圓 ¥ 円

Uncommon typography
asterism
hedera
index, fist
interrobang
irony punctuation
lozenge
tie
Related
In other scripts
Reference design for the Ruble sign used since 2013.

The ruble sign (₽, RUB) is the currency sign used for the Russian ruble, the official currency of Russia. It features the Cyrillic letter Р (R) with a horizontal stroke. The design was approved on 11 December 2013 after a public poll that took place a month earlier.[1] The international three-letter code (according to ISO standard ISO 4217) for the ruble is RUB. In Unicode it is encoded at U+20BD ruble sign (HTML ₽). In Russian, the sign usually follows the value, in English and other languages it precedes the value.

History[edit]

The debates about adopting the national currency symbol for Russian ruble began from nearly the start of Russia's economy integration into the global market in 1990s. The idea was to rival well-known signs such as $, ¥ and £. There were several contests, hosted by different organizations, to choose the sign. The Central Bank of Russia did not yet adopt the symbol.

In 2007, the initiative group of Russian design bureaus and studios proposed to use the stroked Cyrillic Р (R) letter (₽) to represent the ruble. Since then, many electronic retailers, restaurants and cafés started to use the sign unofficially. It became very popular and was widely used as a de facto standard.

Five final options in public poll on the website of Central Bank of Russia

In November 2013, the Central Bank of Russia finally decided to adopt the national currency sign and placed a public poll on its website with five prechosen options. One, earlier provided by the design community, was on the list and got the most votes. On 11 December 2013, it was approved as official sign for the ruble.[1]

1 Russian ruble coin from a special series featuring Ruble sign

References[edit]