Penny

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A one penny coin from Ghana
A one penny coin from Ghana
A variety of low value coins, including a (historical) Irish 2 pence piece and many United States pennies.
A variety of low value coins, including a (historical) Irish 2 pence piece and many United States pennies.
Two British 2 pence coins (below) and a 5 pence coin (above)
Two British 2 pence coins (below) and a 5 pence coin (above)
A silver copy of the rare and valuable 1930 Australian penny
A silver copy of the rare and valuable 1930 Australian penny

A penny (pl. pence or pennies) is a coin or a unit of currency used in several English-speaking countries.

Contents

[edit] Value

In the 8th century, Charlemagne declared that 240 pennies or pfennigs should be minted from a pound of silver. A single coin thus contained about 1.9 grams of silver. (Today, this amount of silver would cost about 56p sterling.)

The penny is among the lowest denomination of coins in circulation.

In addition, variants of the word penny, with which they share a common root, are or were the names of certain units of currency in non-English-speaking countries:

In the United States and Canada, "penny" is normally used to refer to the coin; the quantity of money is a "cent." Elsewhere in the English-speaking world, the plural of "penny" is "pence" when referring to a quantity of money and "pennies" when referring to a number of coins[1]. Thus a coin worth five times as much as one penny is worth five pence, but "five pennies" means five coins, each of which is a penny.

When dealing with British or Irish (pound) money, amounts of the decimal "new pence" less than £1 may be suffixed with "p", as in 2p, 5p, 26p, 72p. Pre-1971 amounts of less than 1/- (one shilling) were denoted with a "d" which derived from the term "denarius", as in 2d, 6d, 10d. The lettering "new pence" was changed to "pence" on British decimal coinage in 1982. Irish pound decimal coinage only used "p" to designate units (possibly as this sufficed for both the English word "pence", and Irish form "pingin").

The British penny as a unit of currency dates back well over a thousand years, and for most of that period the silver penny was the principal denomination in circulation.

[edit] Other uses

O: Draped bust of Aethelred left. +ÆĐELRED REX ANGLOR R: Long cross. +EADPOLD MO CÆNT
Anglo-Saxon silver 'Long Cross' penny of Aethelred II, moneyer Eadwold, Canterbury, c. 997-1003. The cross made cutting the coin into half-pennies or farthings (quarter-pennies easier

To "spend a penny" in British idiom means to urinate. The etymology of the phrase is literal; some public toilets used to be coin-operated, with a pre-decimal penny being the charge levied. Eventually, at around the same time as the introduction of decimal coinage, British Rail gradually introduced better public toilets with the name Superloo and the much higher charge of 6d.[2]

Finding a penny is sometimes considered lucky and gives rise to the saying, "Find a penny, pick it up, and all the day: you'll have good luck." This may be a corruption of "See a pin and pick it up, all the day you'll have good luck" and similar verses, as quoted in The Frank C. Brown Collection of North Carolina Folklore and other sources.

[edit] Nails

In the US, the length of a nail is designated by its penny size. This unit's abbreviation is d (e.g. 10d for 10 penny nails), as for British pence before decimalization. A smaller number indicates a shorter nail and a larger number indicates a longer nail. Nails under 1¼ in., often called brads, are sold mostly in small packages with only a length designation (e.g. ½" (12 mm), 1⅛" (28 mm), etc.).

It is commonly believed that the origin of the term "penny" in relation to nail size is based on the old custom in England of selling nails by the hundred. A hundred nails that sold for six pence were "six penny" nails. The larger the nail, the more a hundred nails would cost, hence the larger nails have a larger number for their penny size. This classification system was still used in England in the 18th century, but is obsolete there now.

[edit] Criticism

The physical handling and counting of pennies creates transaction costs that may be higher than a penny for every penny spent. Furthermore, as has been claimed for micropayments, due to mental transaction costs one penny may exceed the useful price granularity of almost all products and services sold over the counter—granularities of five or ten pence may be sufficient.[3] Also, inflation periodically causes the metal value of pennies to exceed their face value, making them wasteful to mint.[4][5] Several nations have stopped minting equivalent value coins, and efforts have been made to end the routine use of pennies in several countries, including Canada and the United States.[6]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Penny - Oxford English Dictionary". oed.com.
  2. ^ BBC Nation on Film - Rise and Fall of LNER Mod Cons - Engines Must Not Enter the Potato Siding: "Spend a 6d in the superloo"
  3. ^ http://www.mytelus.com/ncp_news/article.en.do?pn=canada&articleID=2897480
  4. ^ New York Times, "AROUND THE NATION; Treasurer Says Zinc Penny May Save $50 Million a Year", April 1, 1981
  5. ^ USA Today, Barbara Hagenbaugh, "Coins cost more to make than face value", May 10, 2006
  6. ^ Lewis, Mark (2002-07-05). Ban The Penny. Forbes.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-16.

[edit] External links

  • The MegaPenny Project - A visualisation of what exponential numbers of pennies would look like.
  • Silver Pennies - Pictures of English silver pennies from Anglo-Saxon times to the present.
  • Copper Pennies - Pictures of English copper pennies from 1797 to 1860.
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