(1) No data available
(2) Coins collectively
(3) A newly invented word or phrase
(4) The act of inventing a word or phrase
(5) Process of making money
(6) Metal money
(1) Indeed, the very term u2018human resourcesu2019 (like u2018human capitalu2019) was a coinage of the utilitarian consensus.
(2) The fall in silver imports lead to the government minting copper coinage called vellon. 1599 to 1620 saw two decades of vellon production.
(3) Louis's coinage may not have influenced the architects of the Euro whose notes and coins began to circulate in January 2002, but this was still a remarkable achievement by this unappreciated Carolingian emperor.
(4) In the 1890s the Populist movement demanded stronger government intervention into the economy, including the free and unlimited coinage of silver at a ratio of sixteen to one.
(5) The coinage and use of compound words often follow a pattern of development in texts and social situations, usually a sequence that reinforces certain usages and may precipitate others.
(6) Strong points or burghs were constructed; control of coinage established; a navy created, and the kingdom divided up into shires and hundreds.
(7) Apart from providing the UK's coinage, Royal Mint also produces some of the world's finest coins and provides coinage for more than 100 countries.
(8) The point is that Fekete's plan calls for opening up the U.S. Mint for coinage of both gold and silver coins as the Founders intended.
(9) The controller of the coinage of tin
(10) The recent coinage u2018Eurointellectualsu2019
(11) He became a senator of the Irish Free State in 1922, chairing the committee on the new Irish coinage , and later causing a controversy with his defence of divorce in June 1925.
(12) Decimal coinage
(13) By the fourth century they were one of only four nations in the world, along with Rome, Persia, and the Kushan Kingdom in northern India, to issue gold coinage .
(14) Though Norman dukes controlled the coinage in their domain, no new coins had been minted since the time of William's grandfather.
(15) Acquiring gold and silver was vital for coinage and, in the late Empire, for official payments in plate and ingots.
(16) In c.973 Eadgar designed a new coinage of pennies, which was regularly renewed and remained the basis of the English currency until long after the Conquest.
(17) Commercial development had encouraged the localized minting of silver in the Irish Sea region from the late tenth century, but the circulation of Hiberno-Norse coinage was restricted to eastern Ireland and other coastal parts.
(18) Though the term is a fairly recent coinage , what it indicates is something familiar to all.
(19) This is not only an imaginative coinage , it is also more accurate than the English word, since computers are rarely asked to compute.
(20) Athelstan, the forceful grandson of Alfred, was the first to impose a unified coinage , which depicted him as the first English king to wear a crown.
(21) He came to the throne rich and bequeathed debts, a corrupt coinage , and roaring inflation; much of the newly acquired land was sold to the gentry and aristocracy by his death.
(22) In 1896, the Democratic party coopted an aspect of the Populists' financial program, the free and unlimited coinage of silver, on behalf of the candidacy of William Jennings Bryan.
(23) After the civil war in the 1920s a committee was established under the chairmanship of WB Yeats to mint a coinage fit for a country newly independent for the UK.
(24) H. L. Mencken, in his explorations into American linguistic usages once pointed out that u2018to get religionu2019 was an American coinage .
(25) Coinage in both England and Francia was used as a means of affirming royal authority, though the volume of production of early medieval coinage is still in question.
(26) It is no wonder that the Carolingian clerics, who were the spin doctors of their day, drew attention to the parallels, which are also manifest in Louis's coinage .
(27) He also is the artist for George Washington's Inaugural Centennial Medal, and was asked by Theodore Roosevelt to redesign the U.S. gold coinage .
(28) Always the playful neologist (pertussion is his coinage from the technical term for whooping cough, pertussis), Wallace has lately become a professor of literature.
(29) Britain abandoned silver coinage in 1947, after more than two millennia.
(30) It is possible, as Richard Brickstock of Durham University has suggested, that the civilian population of the area hoarded small coinage to buy gold, against a future requirement to pay taxes in gold.
neologism
neology