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American currency is dumb

So the [b]penny[/b] comes directly from our ties to the British, which used to have a coin of the same name. Their coin actually got its name from a Germanic coin called the 'pfennig', which roughly translates to meaning just 'money'.

The [b]nickel [/b]was named for the metal it's made with, even though the nickel is actually 3/4s copper.

The [b]dime[/b] comes from the Old French word 'disme', which literally translates to 'one-tenth'.

The [b]quarter[/b] follows the same principle as the dime, except it's now in a different language. A quarter means exactly what it represents: 1/4 of a dollar.

The [b]half dollar[/b] continues the trend of reminding us how fractions work, and it also continues the trend of American money having no f*cking consistency whatsoever. Why is a quarter just called a quarter, but a half dollar has to specify that it is half of a dollar?

When someone asks for a quarter, it's implicitly assumed that they mean the coin. They're not asking for lodging, they're not asking 1/4 of your sandwich, they're not asking for someone to be pulled apart by horses. They just want the coin. If you asked someone for a half, they'd be like: [i]half of what?[/i]

[b]Bonus facts: [/b]It currently costs about 2.1 cents to make a 1-cent penny and about 8.5 cents to make a 5-cent nickel. At least the rest of our coins are profitable
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MartinTheFirst · 26-30, M
Meh, that's not stupid at all. It's quite logical. We used to have öre which means 100th of one crown. We got rid of those and now we have 1kr, 2kr, 5kr and 10kr, due to inflation of course.