PENNY


Meaning of PENNY in English

ˈpenē, -ni noun

( plural pennies -ēz, -iz ; or pence ˈpen(t)s)

Usage: often attributive

Etymology: Middle English penny, peny, from Old English penig, penning; akin to Old High German pfenning, pfenting coin, penny, Old Norse penningr

1.

a. : a British monetary unit equal to 1/240 pound or 1/12 shilling — see money table

b. : a British coin representing one penny, originally made of silver but after the 18th century except for the silver maundy money made of copper or of bronze

2. : any of various coins of small denomination or the monetary units they represent: as

a.

(1) : a Roman denarius

three measures of barley for a penny — Revelations 6:6 (Authorized Version)

they brought unto him a penny — Mt 22:19 (Authorized Version)

(2) plural pennies : a Roman quadrans : farthing

are not two sparrows sold for a penny — Mt 10:29 (Revised Standard Version)

b. plural pennies : a cent of the United States or Canada

penny candy

3.

a. archaic : the part of an amount of money indicated by a specified ordinal

interest was reduced from the twentieth to the fiftieth penny or from five to two percent — Adam Smith

b. : the sum exacted by a specified tax or customary payment

earnest penny

— often used in combination

ale penny

fish penny

4. : a trivial amount : the least bit

never a penny the worse

5. : a piece or sum of money

make an honest penny

saved every penny he earned

6. plural pennies : a token or good-luck piece worth or resembling a cent or a penny

- pennies from heaven

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.