british monetary unit
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: - A unit of currency used in Great Britain: This term refers to any standard monetary denomination that is, or has been, part of the British currency system. It is a category for individual units like the pound, shilling, or penny.
Usage Notes
- "British monetary unit" is a formal, categorical term. It is typically used in economic, historical, or financial contexts to discuss the components of British currency as a system.
- It refers to the or of unit, not a specific amount of money. For example, "the pound sterling" is a specific British monetary unit.
Examples
- Noun:
- The pound sterling is the principal British monetary unit.
- Before decimalization, the shilling was a common British monetary unit.
- The exhibit displayed coins representing various historical British monetary units.
Advanced Usage
- The term can be used in a collective sense to discuss all denominations within the system.
- The study compared the stability of different British monetary units over the last century.
Variants and Related Words
- Monetary unit: The broader category for any standard unit of currency in any country.
- Pound sterling (GBP): The primary British monetary unit in modern use.
- Penny: A smaller denomination British monetary unit (100 pence = 1 pound).
- Shilling: A historical British monetary unit (20 shillings = 1 pound, pre-1971).
Synonyms
- British currency unit
- UK monetary denomination
Related Terms (Contextual)
- Decimalization: The process of converting a currency system (like Britain's in 1971) to a decimal system, which changed the relationships between its monetary units.
- Sterling: A term often used synonymously with British currency, especially the pound.
Noun
- monetary unit in Great Britain