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toonie

 
Dictionary: too·nie  twoo·nie (') pronunciation
also n. Informal
A Canadian coin worth two dollars.

[TWO + -IE (modeled on LOONIE).]


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Wikipedia: Canadian 2 dollar coin
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Two dollars
Canada
Value 2.00 CAD
Mass 7.3 g
Diameter 28 mm
Thickness 1.8 mm
Edge Intermittent milled/smooth
Composition outer ring
  100% Ni
inner core
  92% Cu,
  6% Al,
  2% Ni
Years of minting 1996–present
Catalog number -
Obverse
Obverse
Design Elizabeth II, Queen of Canada
Designer Susanna Blunt
Design date 2003
Reverse
Reverse
Design Polar Bear in early summer on an ice floe
Designer Brent Townsend
Design date 1996

The Canadian 2 dollar coin, commonly called Toonie (also spelled Tooney[1] or Twoney [2]), was introduced on February 19, 1996 by Public Works minister Diane Marleau. The Toonie is a bi-metallic coin which bears an image of a polar bear, by Campbellford, Ontario artist Brent Townsend, on the reverse. The obverse, like all other current Canadian coins, has a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II. It has the words "ELIZABETH II / D.G. REGINA" in a different typeface from any other Canadian coin; it is also the only coin to consistently bear its issue date on the obverse. Canada adopted the patented technology to make these coins from Italy. The engineer, and head of the Italian Mint, Dr. Nicola Ielpo, patented the technology of interlocking two metals in coins in 1990.[3]

It costs 16 cents to mint a Toonie, which is estimated to last 20 years. The discontinued two-dollar bill cost six cents to print and, on average, each bill lasted only one year.[4]

Contents

Naming

When the coin was introduced a number of nicknames were suggested. Some of the early ones included the bearie (analogous to the Loonie and its loon), the bearly, the deuce and the doubloonie (a play on "double Loonie" and the former Spanish doubloon coin).[5]

The name Toonie became so widely accepted that in 2006 the Royal Canadian Mint secured the rights to it. A competition to name the bear resulted in the name "Churchill", a reference both to the common polar bear sightings in Churchill, Manitoba, and Winston Churchill.[6]

Commemorative editions

Year Theme Artist Mintage Special Notes
1999 The founding of Nunavut G. Arnaktavyok 25,130,000 Commemorating the founding of Nunavut, featuring an Inuit drummer
2000 Knowledge/Le Savoir Tony Bianco 29,880,000 Millennium edition, the coin value "2 DOLLARS" appears on the obverse instead of on the reverse. It also features three polar bears.

The issue date of the 2000 coin is on the reverse instead of the obverse side.[7]

2002 The 50th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth's reign The issue date reads 1952-2002.
2006 10th Anniversary Tony Bianco N/A Featuring an updated polar bear image with a rising sun behind the bear. The first circulation coin to be introduced with the new 'mintmark'.[8]
2008 400th Anniversary of founding of Quebec City & 1st French settlement in North America. The coin was designed by Quebec City native Genevieve Bertrand, a jeweller who practices her craft at a boutique in St-Georges-de-Beauce. The engraving was done by RCM engraver William Woodruff. 6,000,000 The design of the coin is dominated by a large fleur-de-lis. Other elements include a ship, and lines representing the St. Lawrence River.[9]

First strikes

Year Theme Mintage Issue Price
2005 Polar Bear 2,375 $14.95
2006 10th Anniversary Toonie 5,000 $15.95
2006 New Mint Mark 5,000 $29.95

Separation of metals

A failure in the bimetallic locking mechanism in the first batch of Toonies caused some coins to separate if struck hard or frozen. Despite media reports of defective toonies, the Canadian Mint responded that the odds of a toonie falling apart were about 1 in 60 million.[10] It is against the law to deliberately attempt to separate a toonie. Defacing coin currency is a summary offense under the Canadian Criminal Code, section 456.[11]

See also

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Canadian 2 dollar coin" Read more