You made a statement that the bills were true, when you knew they were forged.
The charge or crime of uttering is similar to forgery. The difference between them is that forgery is the act of creating a forged document with the intention of defrauding. On the other hand, uttering is the passing of the forged document made by another, still with the intention of defrauding.
Yes, the charge of "uttering" means to KNOWINGLY pass and attempt to cash a false or forged payment document.
A "forged banknote?" Sounds like you are describing Counterfeiting, or the offense of passing counterfeit bills, which is a federal felony offense.
"Uttering" is the actual act of "passing," issuing, or making use of a forged writing or document with the knowledge that it is forged. Uttering is a crime usually charged in conjunction with a forgery.
forged in the crucible of war mean
The person who forged their name is the main culprit. The notary is not 100% blameless.
Coins are struck, not forged, unless by "forged" you mean "counterfeited". There's more information at the Related Question.
He was uttering strange sounds that nobody could understand.
Checksthat have been written, signed and submittedfor paymentby someone other than the account holderwithout the account holder'spermission.
I think you mean a shield and it was Hephaestus.
of Utter
Uttering words or phrases out of context is a complex vocal tic