Have you ever wondered how the world’s currencies got their names?
Why is a dollar called a dollar and a pound a pound?
From country to country, monetary units vary nearly as much as the cultures and languages that use them.
The World Economic Forum recently explained the origins of the names of the world’s most common currencies:
Image: Chartsbin
Dollar
The dollar is the world’s most common currency, used in the US, Australia, Canada, Fiji, New Zealand, and Singapore and elsewhere.
Chinese yuan, Japanese yen, and Korean won
The Chinese character “圓,” meaning “round” or “round coin,” is responsible for the name of the Chinese yuan, Japanese yen, and Korean won.
Crown
Many Scandinavian countries use a currency that derives from the Latin word “corona,” meaning “crown.”
Sweden’s krona, Norway’s krone, Denmark’s krone, Iceland’s króna, and the Estonian kroon (now replaced by the euro), and the Czech Republic’s koruna all derive from the same Latin root.
Dinar
Jordan, Algeria, Serbia, and Kuwait all call their currency “dinar.”
This is a pretty straightforward truncation of the Latin word “denarius,” which was a silver coin used in ancient Rome.
Lira
The Italian and Turkish “lira” come from the Latin word “libra,” meaning “pound.”
Mark
Before the euro, the Deutsche mark and the Finnish markka also draw their names from units of weight. [adrotate group=”25"]
Peso
“Peso” literally means “weight” in Spanish.
Pound
The British pound is derived from the Latin word “poundus” meaning “weight.”
Egypt, Lebanon, South Sudan, Sudan, and Syria call their currency pound.
Rand
Like the dollar, South Africa’s rand comes from the Dutch name for the South African area of Witwatersrand, an area rich in gold.
Rial
The Latin word “regalis,” meaning “royal,” is the origin for the Omani and Iranian “rial.”
Similarly, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen all use a currency called the “riyal.” Before the euro, Spain used “reals” as well.
Ringgit
When coins were minted in precious metals, thieves would shave off small portions of the metal to create new coins.
To combat this, countries began minting coins with jagged edges.
The Malaysian word for jagged is “ringgit,” the name of the currency
Ruble
Russia’s and Belarus’ ruble are named after a measure of weight for silver.
Rupee
The Sanskrit word for wrought silver is “rupya,” which lends its name to the Indian and Pakistani rupee, as well as Indonesia’s rupiah.
Zloty
“Zloty” is the Polish word for “golden.”
Source: OxfordWords
Originally published at Property Update.