I find myself noticing "coin" phrases and other coin words in our everyday slang of today and days of old. Examples: "That'll cost you a pretty penny!" Or watching a western I hear them asking for "bits"? "Two bits please." Is that two cents? Or "He keeps showing up like a bad penny." How'bout you? Got any others?
This thread will shed some light on what two-bits means... https://www.cointalk.com/threads/coin-cut-like-a-slice-of-pizza.284596/#post-2534640
"Stop on a dime." (quick stop) "Turn on a dime." (quick turn) "Drop a dime." (give information) "Penny for your thoughts?" (request information) "Tough as a nickel steak." (very tough)
A Holey dollar is two coins in one. The center is a "dump" and when it's taken out what's left is the "holey" dollar. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hol...:Holey_dollar_coinage_NSW_1813_a128577_02.jpg
"Don't take any wooden nickels." "Not one red cent" "Doesn't have two nickels to rub together." "My two cents worth."
A case quarter is what black people referred to when that wanted a whole quarter instead of 2 dimes and nickel
Let me edit the sentence for it to make more sense A case quarter.. I would hear this phrase but it would never make any sense to me