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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Short answer: currants are smaller.
Long answer: I googled "raisins currants" and found many pages which have slight variations, not necessarily contradictions. Here are three; you can find more if you are careful about your spelling.
1) Raisins: The raisins you and I (americans) know and love typically come from the Thompson Seedless variety, which dry and darken in the sunlight. Currants: Currants are teeny tiny grapes that come from the Zante grape. They originally come from Greece but are now being grown in many places worldwide. Sultanas: These are the ones that cause people confusion because initially these white raisins came from the Sultana grape found in Turkey. However, nowadays most Sultanas bought and sold are simply the same Thompson seedless grapes found in our everyday variety raisin, with the exception that they are instead treated with sulphur dioxide and heated artificially, to give it that plumper texture and golden appearance. Whether or not you feel this is a big deal or not depends on your passion for sultanas.
2) Currants are very small raisins made from the Black Corinth grape (sold fresh as "Champagne grapes"). The name currant (not to be confused with the fresh berries of the same name) is probably a corruption of the word Corinth.
3) Currants, raisins and sultanas are all dried grapes (vine fruits). Raisins and sultanas are derived from varieties of white grape whereas currants are derived from a variety of purple-black grape. Currants are dried, small purple-black coloured, seedless grapes (the 'Corinth' grape),