The 'dollar' (often represented by the
dollar sign: "$") is the name of the official
currency in several countries, dependencies and other regions.
History
The name ''
Thaler'' (from
German ''thal,'' or nowadays usually ''Tal,'' "valley", cognate with "dale" in English) came from the
German coin ''
Guldengroschen'' ("great guilder", being of
silver but equal in value to a
gold guilder), minted from the silver from a rich mine at
Joachimsthal -
Jáchymov (St. Joachim's Valley) in
Bohemia (then part of the
Holy Roman Empire, now part of the
Czech Republic). The basis of "thaler" comes from Joachims'thaler'.
[1]
The name is historically related to the tolar in
Slovenia (
Slovenian tolar) and
Bohemia, the
daalder in the
Netherlands and
daler in
Sweden,
Denmark, and
Norway.
The name "
Spanish dollar" was used for a Spanish coin, the "real de a ocho" and later
peso, worth eight reals (hence the
nickname "pieces of eight"), which was widely circulated during the
18th century in the
Spanish colonies in the New World and in Spanish territories in Asia, namely in the
Philippines.The use of the Spanish dollar and the
Maria Theresa thaler as legal tender for the early
United States are the reasons for the name of the nation's currency. However, the word ''dollar'' was in use in the
English language as slang or mis-pronunciation for the thaler for about 200 years before the
American Revolution, with many quotes in the plays of
Shakespeare referring to dollars as money. Spanish dollars were in circulation in the
Thirteen Colonies that became the
United States, and were
legal tender in
Virginia. In Latin
The Dutch lion dollar circulated throughout the Middle East and was imitated in several German and Italian cities. It was also popular in the
Dutch East Indies as well as in the Dutch
New Netherlands Colony (
New York). The lion dollar also circulated throughout the English colonies during the 17th and early 18th centuries. Examples circulating in the colonies were usually fairly well worn so that the design was not fully distinguishable, thus they were sometimes referred to as "dog dollars."
[1]
Coins known as dollars were also in use in
Scotland during the
17th century, and there is a claim that the use of the English word, and perhaps even the use of the coin, began at the
University of St Andrews. This explains the sum of 'Ten thousand dollars' mentioned in
Macbeth (Act I, Scene II), although the real
Macbeth upon whom the play was based lived in the
11th century, making the reference
anachronistic; however this is not rare in Shakespeare's work.
In the early 19th century, a British five-
shilling piece, or
crown, was sometimes called a dollar, probably because its appearance was similar to the Spanish dollar. This expression appeared again in the 1940s, when U.S. troops came to the UK during
World War II. At the time a U.S. dollar was worth about 5s., so some of the U.S. soldiers started calling it a dollar. Consequently, they called the
half crown "half a dollar", and the expression caught on among some locals and could be heard into the 1960s.
In the early days of the United States, the dollar was a defined unit of trade equal to 412.5 grains (26.73 g) of 90% silver. Today the closest definition to a dollar comes from the United States code Title 31, Section 5116, paragraph b, subsection 2, "The Secretary [of the Treasury] 'shall sell silver' under conditions the Secretary considers appropriate for at least $1.292929292 a fine troy ounce." However
Federal Reserve banks are only prejudiced to deliver tax credits instead of money. The silver content of U.S. coinage was mostly removed in 1965 and the dollar essentially became a baseless free-floating
fiat currency; though the
U.S. Mint continues to make silver $1 bullion coins at this weight. It is believed that the original green color and other specific designs of a paper dollar were introduced by 2 Armenian brothers from
Massachusetts who were Near-Eastern immigrants.
Synonyms and slang
★ The word 'buck' — possibly an abbreviation of ''buckskin'' or ''buckarooney'', an intrinsic "currency" for trade with
American Indians known since
1746 — has been recorded since
1856 and is widely used as a synonym for the dollars of many countries, including
Australia,
Canada,
New Zealand,
Hong Kong and the
United States.
★ ''Greenback'', a nickname originally applied to a 19th-century United States
Demand Note, is now a common specific reference to the
U.S. dollar.
★ ''Dollar'' is a now-obsolete British slang term for five shillings.
★ ''Simoleon'' is an old slang term from the late 1800s, of American origin.
★ ''Clams'' have been used as slang for dollars as in, "That cost me twenty clams!".
★ In Canada, one dollar is known as the
loonie because of the animal (loon) that is depicted on the flip side of the coin, though this term is only used to refer to the coin itself, not a unit of account.
Related names in modern currencies
★ The ''
tala'' is based on the
Samoan pronunciation of the word "dollar". Likewise, the name of the smaller unit, ''seneiti'', equates to "cent".
★ The
Slovenian tolar had the same origin as dollar, i.e.
thaler.
National currencies called "dollar"
Some of these are called dollars in English, but by a different name in the native language of the country. See the navigational box below for a complete list.
The name has also been applied to the
international dollar, a hypothetical unit of currency that has the same purchasing power that the U.S. dollar has in the United States at a given point in time.
See also
★
Denarius - Roman Empire currency
★
Dollar sign
★
List of circulating currencies
References
1. The making of the atomic bomb, , Richard, Rhodes, Simon and Schuster, ,
★
Etymonline (word history) for "buck" and
Etymonline (word history) for "dollar"
★
Thesaurus (synonyms)
★
The Source: Slang Dictionary