Thick un~, a sovereign; originally a crown piece, or five shillings.
Rub smooth one or two tea-spoonfuls of currie powder, a tea-spoonful of flour, and an ounce of butter.
When fit for use, writing paper is put between sheets of blackened paper, and the upper sheet is to be written on, with common ink, by the glass or enamel pen.
Beat a quarter of an ounce of sweet almonds with a tea-spoonful of water till it is quite fine, boil it in the broth, and strain it.
Pare a lemon, and cut it into slices twice as thick as a half-crown piece; divide these into dice, and put them into a quarter of a pint of melted butter, No.
Some, in a separate vinegar, gently bruise a pod of Ginny pepper, and strain it to the other; then add as much mustard as will lie upon a half-crown piece.
Luckily my knapsack, hidden in the hay, had escaped the poachers' observation; and the recovery of Dick Cludde's crown piece gave me a good deal of pleasure.
He held up my crown piece, which in the violence of my movements, I suppose, had sprung out of my tattered garment.
THICK-UN, a sovereign; a crown piece, or five shillings.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "crown piece" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.