moneta

Etymology
.

Noun

 * 1)  coin

Etymology 1
From. Compare 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) coin
 * 2) currency

Etymology
From, an Italian goddess conflated with Juno after her introduction (cf. evocatio) to Rome in 344 BC. Her temple was used by the Roman mint from 273 BC until it was destroyed by fire and moved to the Colosseum by in AD 84. The usual derivation—given by and the Byzantine — is from  + a variant of, but it is now considered more likely the earlier Italian goddess's name came from a form of.

Noun



 * 1) mint, a place for coining money
 * 2) money, coinage
 * 3)   ("moneyer, minter")

Descendants

 * Dalmatian:
 * Italo-Romance:
 * Padanian:
 * Northern Gallo-Romance:
 * Old Francoprovençal: moneia
 * Southern Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Insular Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Northern Gallo-Romance:
 * Old Francoprovençal: moneia
 * Southern Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Insular Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Northern Gallo-Romance:
 * Old Francoprovençal: moneia
 * Southern Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Insular Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Southern Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Insular Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Insular Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Insular Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Insular Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Borrowings:
 * Borrowings:

Etymology
Borrowed from.

Noun

 * 1) coin (a piece of currency)

Etymology
..

Noun

 * 1) coin