coin : Idioms & Phrases


Coin balance

  • . See Illust. of Balance.
Webster 1913

coin bank

  • noun a container (usually with a slot in the top) for keeping money at home
    money box; bank; savings bank.
    • the coin bank was empty
WordNet

coin blank

  • noun a flat metal disk ready for stamping as a coin
    planchet.
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coin box

  • noun the part of a slot machine that serves as a receptacle for the coins
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coin collecting

  • noun the collection and study of money (and coins in particular)
    numismatology; numismatics; coin collecting.
WordNet

coin collection

  • noun a collection of coins
  • noun the collection and study of money (and coins in particular)
    numismatology; numismatics; coin collecting.
WordNet

coin collector

  • noun a collector and student of money (and coins in particular)
    numismatologist; numismatist.
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coin machine

  • noun a machine that is operated by the insertion of a coin in a slot
    slot machine.
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coin silver

  • noun a silver of the degree of purity established for making legal silver coins
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coin slot

  • noun a slot through which coins can be inserted into a slot machine
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coin-operated

  • adjective of devices that do not operate without the prior insertion of one or more coins
    • a coin-operated telephone
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proof coin or proof

  • a coin which has been specially struck, to produce the finest specimen of its type. Usually such coins are double-struck from polished dies, and the raised features are sometimes frosted. They thus have sharper features and more mirror-like fields than production coins (i.e. those coins struck for circulation); they are considered by coin collectors as the most desirable specimens of each coin, and usually sell at a premium to their corresponding production coins.
Webster 1913

To pay one in his own coin

  • to return to one the same kind of injury or ill treatment as has been received from him. Colloq.
Webster 1913

To sweat coin

  • to remove a portion of a piece of coin, as by shaking it with others in a bag, so that the friction wears off a small quantity of the metal.
Webster 1913