coinages in English

noun
1
coins collectively.
the volume of coinage in circulation
2
the invention of a new word or phrase.
His learned coinage of the phrase fides levata - a convincing but altogether fictional Latin term - would contribute to the overwhelming success of Panofsky's account.

Use "coinages" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "coinages" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "coinages", or refer to the context using the word "coinages" in the English Dictionary.

1. The Oxford English Dictionary lists only three 20th century coinages (hostess, Burgheress, clerkess)

2. “Incontrovertible”, “hallucination” and “cryptography” are other Browneisms that entered the language, though quite a few of his coinages (from “Alliciency” – attractiveness, to

3. The method of attribution by provenance works best with coinages of a small scale or a low value, such as bronze coinage.

4. The Different Plural Forms of Curriculum Curriculum is from New Latin (a post-medieval form of Latin used mainly in churches and schools and for scientific coinages), in …

5. The first study of the Attalid kingdom in English for over a generation Includes contributions by world specialists on Hellenistic history and coinage Illustrated throughout with comprehensive images of major coinages from the second century BC

6. ‘What with all my pop-culture Anglicisms, I don't always do a terribly good job at nurturing an overseas readership, so it's good to form bridges across the water.’ ‘However, native coinages expressing resistance to Anglicisms include baladeur Walkman, cadreur cameraman, logiciel software, ordinateur computer, and rentrée comeback.’

7. The international scientific vocabulary coinages from Greek and Latin roots adopted by European languages (and subsequently by other languages) to describe scientific topics (sociology, zoology, philosophy, botany, medicine, all "-logy" words, etc.) can also be termed a superstratum, although for this last case, "Adstratum" might be a better designation (despite the prestige of science and of