coinage

Etymology
, from, from.

Noun

 * 1) The process of coining money.
 * 2)  Coins taken collectively; currency.
 * 3)  The creation of new words, neologizing.
 * 4)  Something which has been made or invented, especially a coined word; a neologism.
 * 5) * 2021, Thomas Kullmann and Dirk Siepmann, Tolkien as a Literary Artist: Exploring Rhetoric, Language and Style in The Lord of the Rings, Palgrave-Macmillan 2021
 * Most importantly perhaps, it is evident that the impression of archaicity which any reader will experience on reading The Lord of the Rings is partly due to three simple lexical causes: the “overuse” of words borrowed from nineteenth-century fiction (e.g. yonder, journey [v], topmost), the avoidance of words associated with the modern world and the comparatively dense use of new coinages, unusual grammatical patterns, rare or obsolescent words.
 * 1) The process of creating something new.
 * 1) * 2021, Thomas Kullmann and Dirk Siepmann, Tolkien as a Literary Artist: Exploring Rhetoric, Language and Style in The Lord of the Rings, Palgrave-Macmillan 2021
 * Most importantly perhaps, it is evident that the impression of archaicity which any reader will experience on reading The Lord of the Rings is partly due to three simple lexical causes: the “overuse” of words borrowed from nineteenth-century fiction (e.g. yonder, journey [v], topmost), the avoidance of words associated with the modern world and the comparatively dense use of new coinages, unusual grammatical patterns, rare or obsolescent words.
 * 1) The process of creating something new.

Translations

 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 貨幣制度
 * Finnish: rahan lyöminen
 * French:
 * German:
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: 貨幣鋳造
 * Middle English: coynage
 * Portuguese: cunhagem
 * Russian: (монет)
 * Spanish:
 * Tagalog: menta