the aspect of a situation that is the opposite of or contrasts with the one you have been talking about
used to talk about two ways of looking at the same situation
Extra Examples
The first English gold coin was struck in 1255.
The last silver coins were minted in 1964.
They flipped/tossed a coin to see who should go first.
Very few old 5p coins are still in circulation.
What is the probability of the coin landing heads?
coins jingling in his pockets
Word Origin
Middle English: from Old French coin ‘wedge, corner, die’, coigner ‘to mint’, from Latin cuneus ‘wedge’. The original sense was ‘cornerstone’, later ‘angle or wedge’ (senses now spelled quoin); in late Middle English the term denoted a die for stamping money, or a piece of money produced by such a die.
Copyright
This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
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