n
(historical) The state treasury of Ancient Rome.
n
(slang, finance) the Australian dollar.
n
Alternative form of bezant [(historical) A coin made of gold or silver, minted at Byzantium and used in currency throughout mediaeval Europe.]
n
(informal, finance) Canadian dollar
n
(finance) The currency pair British Pound against United States Dollar.
n
The official currency of Canada.
n
(money) A subunit of currency equal to one-hundredth of the main unit of currency in many countries. Symbol: ¢.
n
(computing, text encoding) A specific graphic symbol (¤) which replaced the dollar sign ($) in some international text encoding systems, starting with w:ISO 646.
n
(historical, numismatics) The former currency unit of Germany (now replaced by the euro), abbreviated as DM or DEM.
n
Pronunciation spelling of dollar. [Official designation for currency in some parts of the world, including Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and elsewhere. Its symbol is $.]
n
Official designation for currency in some parts of the world, including Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and elsewhere. Its symbol is $.
n
The symbol $, used to indicate a price in dollars.
adj
Alternative form of dollars-and-cents [Considered or expressed in terms of money.]
n
Dollars generally; money, especially in the context of materialistic capitalism.
n
(US, numismatics) A gold coin with a face value of $20 formerly used in the United States, the double of the US eagle coin.
n
(informal) A coin of the major denomination (dollar, euro, etc.); money in general.
n
The day on which the euro became the official currency in much of Europe — 1st January 2002.
n
(historical) The European Currency Unit (symbol ₠), a currency used in the European Community before the euro.
n
The currency unit of the European Monetary Union. Symbol: €
n
any of the eight different coins that are in circulation in the eurozone, ranging in value from 1 cent to 2 euros. The 1 euro coin can also be specifically referred to as a euro coin.
adj
Describing each of the 12 members of the European Currency Union who have the Euro as their national currency.
n
One hundredth of a Eurodollar.
n
(obsolete, informal) Synonym of euro (“€”) (nickname used for the unified European currency prior to its introduction and naming; in conversation, media, and fiction)
n
(finance, historical) A deposit, in korunas, held in a bank outside of the countries that used that currency.
n
(dated, rare, sometimes humorous) The group of countries in Europe that use the Euro for currency.
n
(finance, historical) A deposit, in Deutsche Marks, held in a bank outside of Germany.
n
Collectively, the European Union member states whose official currency is the euro.
n
Alternative form of 50 cent army [Internet users who are paid by the authorities of the People's Republic of China to spread propaganda and disinformation on their behalf.]
n
Alternative form of 50 cent army [Internet users who are paid by the authorities of the People's Republic of China to spread propaganda and disinformation on their behalf.]
n
(metonymically) The European Central Bank.
n
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see gold, coin.
n
Ten wealthy businessmen who were identified in 2009 for controversially buying shares in Anglo Irish Bank.
n
Alternative form of Gold Stick (“ceremonial bodyguard”) [A ceremonial bodyguard to the British Royal Household, holding the rank of colonel.]
n
The United States dollar.
n
(banking, historical) An issue of coins, minted in base metal, made by the forces of James II during the Williamite War in Ireland.
n
(historical) A Scottish billon coin circulated in the reigns of Mary and James VI.
n
pound (sterling) (from Latin libra)
n
(Australia, insurance, informal) A life insurance salesman or saleswoman.
n
a currency deposit recorded as a US dollar in the Lebanese banking system that cannot be withdrawn as such due to the Lebanese liquidity crisis, instead being available only for exchange for Lebanese pounds at massively reduced rates.
n
(historical finance) The monetary unit of a country stated in terms of the monetary unit of a second country which uses the same metallic standard.
n
(cartomancy) The twenty-first Lenormand card.
n
(economics) A proposed or theoretical currency of Greece which would replace the euro.
n
(India) The demonetization of certain banknotes.
n
In modern usage, money or currency; rarely, coinage, especially as a means to control a monetary system (i.e., as coinage can mean a monetary system). Archaically, a byzant (specific gold coin). In ancient use, the current coin of a state.
n
(chiefly in the plural) Money in the euro currency earned from the sale of oil.
n
(Pokémon) A unit of currency that is usually described as having characteristics of yen and/or dollar. Its symbol is .
n
(US) The symbol # (octothorpe, hash, number sign)
n
(preceded by "the" or "The") Nickname of the prison on Alcatraz Island, USA.
n
An old English gold coin, the rial.
n
(historical, Roman antiquity) A Roman coin worth one sixth of an as.
n
(UK, typography, numismatics, historical) Synonym of slash ⟨/⟩ in its use to mark the amount of shillings in a sum or (obsolete) in all its uses.
n
The unified currency proposed for all EU states; it became the Euro.
n
A monetary unit of account maintained by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the value of which is based on a basket of major currencies, currently (since 2016) consisting of the US dollar, the euro, the renminbi, the Japanese yen, and the pound sterling.
n
Coin, or coined silver, gold, or other metal, used as a circulating medium; specie.
n
Alternative form of tetradrachm [(historical, numismatics) A silver coin in Ancient Greece, equivalent to four drachms.]
n
A banker or money changer in Ancient Greece
n
(slang) United States dollar
n
The official currency of the United States.
n
The dollar considered as a xenocurrency
n
Uncommon spelling of dong (“Vietnamese currency”). [The currency of Vietnam, 100 xus. Symbol: ₫]
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