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Translingual
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Description
[edit]An S-shape with one or, in some typefaces, two vertical line crossing it completely. See for the usage with explicitly two lines.
Etymology
[edit]$ appears to have evolved circa 1775 in the United States from a common abbreviation for pesos, also known as piastres or pieces of eight, a P/raised-S ligature PS.[1] It was used in the US before the adoption of the dollar in 1785.[2]
(computing): This sense is the result of homophony between English cache and cash, dollars being a form of cash.
Noun
[edit]$
- money
- 1954, Donald's Diary (in English):
- Uncle Ray's Loans / We lend $$$
- (used everywhere except in the Philippines) peso
- dollar
- 1977, advertisement page in Uncanny X-Men, #106, page 8
- Fool all your friends. You'll get a Million[sic] $$$ worth of laughs with these exact reproductions of old U. S. Gold Banknotes (1840).
- 1977, advertisement page in Uncanny X-Men, #106, page 8
- escudo
- (computing) cache
- 2010, CIS501 lecture notes[3] (in English), University of Pennsylvania:
- How to provide additional D$ bandwidth?
Derived terms
[edit]Letter
[edit]$
- A substitute for the letter S, used as a symbol of money or perceived greed in business practices.
- Micro$oft Window$
- 2015, “Pixtopia”, in Star vs. the Forces of Evil, season 1, episode 6b:
- [the text below is written on-screen in large letters, once Marco reveals his "emergency cash stash] Marco'$ emergency ca$h $ta$h
- A substitute for the letter S, used as a censored or filter-avoidance spelling.
- $h!t ― shit
Derived terms
[edit]- (money or greed): English: CO$ (“Church of Scientology”); Micro$oft, M$, M$FT (“Microsoft”); $cientology (“Scientology”)
- (censored or filter-avoidance): English: @$$ (“ass”), le$bian (“lesbian”)
Symbol
[edit]$
- The symbol for the dollar and peso, or by convention, other currency.
- The unofficial symbol for the escudo.
- (programming) Prefix indicating a variable in some languages, such as Perl, PHP, or shell scripts.
Usage notes
[edit]When used as a currency symbol, $ precedes the number it qualifies in English, despite being pronounced second. For example, "$1" is read as one dollar, not dollar one unlike the usage in languages such as French or German: "1 $", "2,50 $".
When used for the Portuguese escudo, $ is placed between the escudos and centavos, e.g. 2$50. The official symbol for the escudo is (with two bars), but that form is unified with the single-bar form in Unicode. A single-bar dollar sign is frequently employed in its place even for official purposes.
Derived terms
[edit]- (currency):
- (variable): English: $DEITY (“generic deity”)
Related terms
[edit]See also
[edit]Currency signs
- ؋ – afghani
- ฿ – baht
- ₿ – bitcoin
- ¢ – cent
- ₡ – colón
- ₵ – cedi
- – cifrão
- Ð – dogecoin
- $ – dollar sign
- ₫ – dong
- ֏ – dram
- € – euro
- ƒ – florin/guilder/gulden
- ₲ – guarani
- ₴ – hryvnia
- ₭ – kip
- ₾ – lari
- ₺ – Turkish lira
- ₼ – manat
- ₥ – mill
- ₦ – naira
- ₱ – Philippine peso
- £ or ₤ – pound/lira
- ﷼ – rial/riyal
- ៛ – riel
- ރ – rufiyaa
- ₽ – ruble
- ₨ – rupee
- ௹ – rupee
- ₹ – Indian rupee
- ૱ – rupee (in Gujarat)
- 𞱱 – rupee (in Urdu)
- ₪ – new shekel
- ⃀ – som
- ৲ or ৳ – taka
- ₸ – tenge
- ₮ – tugrik, tether
- ₩ – won
- ¥ – yen/yuan
Formerly used currency signs
References
[edit]- ^ Florian Cajori (1993) A history of mathematical notations[1]
- ^ “Origin of the $ Sign”, in US Bureau of Engraving and Printing[2], 2009 May 22 (last accessed), archived from the original on 2007-09-28
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