monetarius

التعريفات والمعاني

== Latin == === Etymology === From monēta (“mint, money”) +‎ -ārius (“-ary: forming adjectives”), from the presence of the Roman mint at the Templum Iunonis Monetae (“Temple of Juno Moneta”) from 273 BC to AD 84, q.v. === Adjective === monētārius (feminine monētāria, neuter monētārium); first/second-declension adjective Of or related to mints or minting. (Late Latin) Monetary, of or related to money, particularly coinage. ==== Declension ==== First/second-declension adjective. ==== Synonyms ==== (of or related to money): monetalis ==== Descendants ==== Catalan: monetari Middle French: monétaire → Danish: monetær → Dutch: monetair → Indonesian: moneter → Malay: monetari, مونيتاري → English: monetary → German: monetär → Norwegian: monetær → Romanian: monetari → Swedish: monetär Italian: monetario Portuguese: monetário Spanish: monetario === Noun === monētārius m (genitive monētāriī or monētārī); second declension (Medieval Latin, historical) Moneyer, the operator of a mint. ==== Declension ==== Second-declension noun. 1Found in older Latin (until the Augustan Age). ==== Alternative forms ==== moneta, m-o, mo ==== Descendants ==== → Proto-West Germanic: *munitārīOld English: mynetereMiddle English: mynterEnglish: minterOld Saxon: muniteriOld High German: munizāriMiddle High German: münzære, münzerGerman: Münzer (archaic) === References === C.A. Nordman (1921), Anglo-Saxon Coins Found in Finland, Helsinki: Holger Schildt, p. 26.