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Penny   /pˈɛni/   Listen
noun
Penny  n.  (pl. pennies or pence. pennies denotes the number of coins; pence the amount of pennies in value)  
1.
A former English coin, originally of copper, then of bronze, the twelfth part of an English shilling in account value, and equal to four farthings, or about two cents; usually indicated by the abbreviation d. (the initial of denarius). Note: "The chief Anglo-Saxon coin, and for a long period the only one, corresponded to the denarius of the Continent... (and was) called penny, denarius, or denier." The ancient silver penny was worth about three pence sterling (see Pennyweight). The old Scotch penny was only one twelfth the value of the English coin. In the United States the word penny is popularly used for cent.
2.
Any small sum or coin; a groat; a stiver.
3.
Money, in general; as, to turn an honest penny. "What penny hath Rome borne, What men provided, what munition sent?"
4.
(Script.) See Denarius.
Penny cress (Bot.), an annual herb of the Mustard family, having round, flat pods like silver pennies (Thlaspi arvense). Also spelled pennycress.
Penny dog (Zool.), a kind of shark found on the South coast of Britain: the tope.
Penny pincher, Penny father, a penurious person; a miser; a niggard. The latter phrase is now obsolete.
Penny grass (Bot.), pennyroyal. (R.)
Penny post, a post carrying a letter for a penny; also, a mail carrier.
Penny wise, wise or prudent only in small matters; saving small sums while losing larger; penny-wise; used chiefly in the phrase, penny wise and pound foolish.



adjective
Penny  adj.  Denoting the weight in pounds for one thousand; used in combination, with respect to nails; as, tenpenny nails, nails of which one thousand weight ten pounds.



Penny  adj.  Worth or costing one penny; as, penny candy.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Penny" Quotes from Famous Books



... would be instructive. He once took a theatre without a penny to carry it on; and having announced Hamlet without anybody to play, boldly studied and performed the part himself, to the unextinguishable delight of the audience. Soon after this, he formed a company for supplying the metropolis with Punches ...
— Chambers' Edinburgh Journal - Volume XVII., No 422, New Series, January 31, 1852 • Various

... shelter are fortunate, fortunate in comparison with the utterly homeless. In London fifty thousand human beings get up every morning, not knowing where they are to lay their heads at night. The luckiest of this multitude, those who succeed in keeping a penny or two until evening, enter a lodging-house, such as abound in every great city, where they find a bed. But what a bed! These houses are filled with beds from cellar to garret, four, five, six beds in a room; as many as can be crowded in. Into every bed four, five, or six human beings ...
— The Condition of the Working-Class in England in 1844 - with a Preface written in 1892 • Frederick Engels

... refused to fill her order; but this did not daunt her. She knew that among the lot she would soon come across a catch-penny, and in this supposition she ...
— Pretty Madcap Dorothy - How She Won a Lover • Laura Jean Libbey

... which the Pope's Head in Cornhill attained. This is one of the few taverns which Stow deals with at length. He describes it as being "strongly built of stone," and favours the opinion that it was at one time the palace of King John. He tells, too, how in his day wine was sold there at a penny the pint and bread provided free. It was destroyed in the Great Fire, but rebuilt shortly after. Pepys knew both the old and the new house. In the former he is said to have drunk his first "dish of tea," and he certainly enjoyed many a meal under its roof, notably on ...
— Inns and Taverns of Old London • Henry C. Shelley

... who you are," she continued, unhesitatingly. "You are a gambler and a bar-room rough. I won't touch a penny of your money. I told Mr. Wynkoop that I shouldn't, but that I would endeavor to do my Christian duty by this poor girl. He was to bring her here himself, and keep ...
— Bob Hampton of Placer • Randall Parrish


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