You are thinking of "What hath God Wrought", it was the first telegraph ever made by Samuel Morse, creator of the telegraph and Morse Code.
To 'coin a phrase' means to have invented it or 'came up with it'.
Moneta d'argento is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "silver coin." The phrase translates literally as "coin from silver," "coin in silver" or "coin of silver" in English. The pronunciation will be "mo-NEY-ta dar-DJEN-to" in Pisan Italian.
'Coin a phrase' - 'Quoins' are used to wedge columns of type in the printers 'chase'. Printers believed to put things in type was to make them permanent and believe this to be the origin of the phrase, 'Quoin a phrase'. (this is not the only explanation though - there are several literary uses of the phrase too!)
You are probably thinking of an "error coin". This coin is any coin which does not meet the standards of the US Mint or has a flaw in its design or manufacture.
It means that the coin is rare. For example a 1909-S VDB cent is a key date. This coin is rare.
'Le bon coin' is a French phrase which means 'To the right corner' in English. The phrase is often heard when in relation to a boxing ring or when choosing sides.
Someone at a coin shop will evaluate your coin, but they will offer you what they want to pay for it.
May the odds be ever in your favor
To coin a phrase ( or a term) is to invent a figure of speech. Finley Peter Dunne was the first person to call a left-handed pitcher a "southpaw," and so he is said to have coined the term.
No, it is not true. Dollar coins in the United States do have the phrase "In God We Trust" on them. This phrase has been included on U.S. coins since the 1860s.
"Give me liberty or give me death"
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