What is another word for coin money?

Pronunciation: [kˈɔ͡ɪn mˈʌnɪ] (IPA)

The term "coin money" can be replaced with equivalent phrases or synonyms that express the same sentiment. Some synonyms for "coin money" include "mint money," "print currency," "strike coin," "forge cash," "produce currency," or "manufacture legal tender." These phrases are interchangeable with "coin money," although they may differ in their nuances or connotations. "Mint money," for example, suggests the production of metallic currency, while "print currency" indicates the printing of paper money. However, all of these phrases convey the idea of creating legal tender, regardless of the medium or method used.

What are the hypernyms for Coin money?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Coin money

  • Doctors coin money when they do procedures but family medicine doesn't have any procedures.
    David Jones
  • The chief duty of the National Government in connection with the currency of the country is to coin money and declare its value.
    James A. Garfield
  • The destruction of life is always a crime. There may be certain cases in which it is the lesser of two evils; but here it is needless and without a shadow of justification, for it happens only because of the selfish unscrupulous greed of those who coin money out of the agonies of the animal kingdom in order to pander to the perverted tastes of those who are sufficiently depraved to desire such loathsome aliment. Remember that it is not only those who do the obscene work, but those who by feeding upon this dead flesh encourage them and make their crime remunerative, who are guilty before God of this awful thing. Every person who partakes of this unclean food has his share in the indescribable guilt and suffering by which it has been obtained.
    Charles Webster Leadbeater
  • And if you look at the things that are denied to the states in the Constitution, for example, they are denied the right to coin money. Now, throughout history, the right to coin money has been a symbol of sovereignty. If states do not have the right to coin money, they are not sovereign in the sense that would justify secession as a state right.
    Harry V. Jaffa

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