eurozone or Eu·ro·zone,or eu·ro zone [yoor-oh-zohn, yur-oh‐] ExamplesWord Origin noun
- those member states of the European Union that have adopted the euro as their national currency, considered as a single economic entity: the eurozone’s exports.
Origin of eurozone First recorded in 1995–2000; euro2 + zone Examples from the Web for eurozone Contemporary Examples of eurozone
The Eurozone, currently accounting for 24 percent of global wealth, will likely see its share decline slightly to 23 percent.
World Will Be 40 Percent Richer By 2018
Credit Suisse
December 20, 2013
In the last quarter of 2012, the Eurozone as a whole contracted, which has never happened before.
Austerity, Not a Great Cure for Debt
Ilana Glazer
April 29, 2013
Future of the Eurozone The recent debt crisis in Cyprus was also highly debated at the AIC.
The 16th Credit Suisse Asian Investment Conference
Credit Suisse
April 29, 2013
Trust is by far the lowest in Europe, which is maybe no surprise as the Eurozone crisis drags on.
Ilana Glazer
April 12, 2013
Eurozone leaders are ignoring these basic tenets of deposit insurance.
The Resolution of the Cyprus Banking Collapse Paves the Way for More Crises
Robert Shapiro
April 1, 2013
British Dictionary definitions for eurozone Eurozone noun
- the geographical area containing the countries that have joined the European single currency