Of old they were called Hephzibah and Beulah; and now those ancient words come back to mind with newly-minted meaning, with the scent of spring.
God demands not advocates, but witnesses; and we must see for ourselves, before we can bear witness to others, the glory of that light still flushing our faces, and the accent of conviction minted in our speech.
And when they were conscious of his mighty moving and stirring within, woe to them if they did not utter it in burning words, fresh minted from the heart.
Maculate means spotted, and the coins here illustrated, believed to have been minted at St. Albans, obviously feature no physical King but rather the Kaadman or Good Man of St. Albans in his dual aspect of age and youth.
The dotted effigy on the coins supposedly minted at St. Albans may be connoted with the curious fact that in Welsh the word alban meant a primary point.
AEgean island of AEgina, then a great centre of commerce, minted money, but the annalists of China go far further in their claim that as far back as 1091 B.
Since the coats of arms for the islands of Guernsey and Jersey appear on the coins minted for these islands in England in the nineteenth century, the following notes may be of interest:-- In 1279 King Edward I.
It is probable that all, or almost all, the 342 coins of this collection were minted during the first quarter of the 4th century--in fact, during the ten years between A.
It was of the same size of the minted half-eagle, but contained more of gold.
It contained more gold than the same weight of minted coin; but the money used in nearly all transactions was gold dust; hence, every merchant, saloonkeeper or gambler had his gold scales at command.
She has always been in love with 'accomplishments,' and she loves natures that are minted into current coin of ready gifts and graces.
They remain, so to speak, in nuggets; they areminted into no current coin of fleeting fashion and shallow accomplishment.
It is minted principally from Russian Imperials and Turkish pounds which drift into Persia in small quantities in the course of business.
So the yearly drain of silver coin from Teheran as soon as it is minted is very considerable, especially to the north, north-east and north-west provinces.
At last a thought struck me, and I saw farther through my difficulties than ever mortal man did through a millstone; but, like a politician, I minted not the matter to James.
We will accept corn, or hen's eggs, or a sandwich at the door, and as for a cheerful glance of the eye, it is for us the best of minted coin.
For a lift in my wagon, a drink at the door, a flying word across my fences, I have taken argosies of minted wealth!
This column is derived from the figures given by the Currency Department, and the total of net coinage issued in individual years differs somewhat from the total amount minted as stated in the Mint Statistics.
In 1861 this was a freely minted coin worth no more than its bullion value.
Her son, Sihtric Silken Beard, who was most active in mobilising the Norse troops, must have been a Christian, since the coins which were minted in Dublin during his reign are stamped with the sign of the cross.
In Dublin coins were minted for the first time in Ireland[80] during the reign of Sihtric Silken Beard (c.
Coins of copper may also be minted for small fractional circulation, as authorized by law and the usage of the government for eighty years, but it is not necessary to discuss that topic at large in this investigation.
Young leaves of beeches and poplars gleamed like minted gold; and on the lawn, the great twin beeches cast a stealthily encroaching continent of shadow.
Previous to 1906 this coin was minted in England, but in that year a branch of the royal mint was established at Ottawa.
Four of them (the founding members of the LMU: France, Belgium, Italy and Switzerland) agreed on a gold to silver conversion rate and minted gold and silver coins which were legal tender in all of them.
They all busily minted coins (gold, silver) and had their own - distinct - standard weights and measures.
He had seen the money as gold, a brimming double handful ofminted gold, with gold's comforting substance and weight.
What he had heard of the conversation between Margaret and Kamis had assured him of the Kafir's resources and he felt himself already as solvent as if the minted money were heavy in his pockets.
Several hoards have been discovered at different times in Scotland, of small gold pellets, marked with a cross or star in relief, and which, there can be little doubt, is the earliest Scottish minted money.
The latter are elsewhere referred to, along with other examples, as the primitive type of native minted currency.
The iron or bronze and copper ring-money of the first century must therefore be presumed as only analogous to our modern copper coinage, and not as the sole barbarous substitute for a minted circulating medium.
And he, too, chinked many a silver dollar and minted gold piece into his cash-box, because when men rush to gold diggings they are not likely to go empty-handed.
And for two very excellent reasons: Imprimis, they both were poking fun at me last night; Helen said that I couldn't find gold if it were in a minted twenty-dollar gold piece in my own pocket.
The silver pennies mintedfrom them were later on called coffin pennies.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "minted" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: conceived; fabricated; invented