During the colonial period large parts of North America were owned by Spain which at that time used pesos as its currency. The most common coin was a silver 1-peso piece that was worth 8 smaller units called reals (pronounced ray-AHL).
For historical reasons Spain didn't make smaller-denomination coins, so the strange practice was to use a knife to cut a peso into reals, just like slicing a Pizza. The 1-real pieces came to be called "bits" in English, so a quarter of a peso was thus - you guessed it - "two bits".
When the US became independent, the Spanish peso was so widely used that it was allowed to co-circulate at par with the US dollar until 1857. In fact, the size and weight of the US silver dollar were chosen to match the peso (by then also called a Spanish Milled Dollar); it's also the reason the US opted for making 25¢ coins instead of the more logical 20¢ denomination, in order to stay compatible with the Spanish 1, 2, 4, and 8 real system.
The reason the US quarter dollar (25 cents) is called "two bits" originates from the circa. 1598 practice of dividing a Spanish dollar (the Real de a Ocho) into eight wedge-shaped segments. The coin was worth eight Spanish reales, thus each wedge was worth 1 reale or "a piece of eight". Two such pieces (or "two bits") became a common nickname for a quarter dollar.
There are 119 ridges on a U.S. mint quarter. Also called "reeds"
It is the weight of two dimes * * * * * Interesting but not true. 2 US dimes = 4.536 grams 1 US quarter = 5.67 grams That is a discrepancy of 25% : not a minor difference!
In the early years of the United States, the government had to decide what kind of money the new country would use. The Spanish Milled Dollar and its fractional parts had been used in colonial America for many years so it was decided to base the US money on it. The Spanish Milled Dollar was also called a "piece of eight" because it would often be cut into 8 equal pieces called bits . For a time both Spanish and American coins were used in daily trade so in the transition from the Spanish Dollar to the American Dollar, American quarters were worth "2 bits", or one fourth of the Spanish Dollar, the American half dollar was worth "4 bits", or one half of the Spanish Dollar. A quarter and a half dollar were worth "6 bits" or 3/4 of a Spanish Dollar. Although the "piece of eight" Spanish Dollar is no longer considered legal tender in the US, its history in our monetary system lives on in the term "2 bits"
One US quarter has a weight equal to 0.00567kilogram.
The reason the US quarter dollar (25 cents) is called "two bits" originates from the circa. 1598 practice of dividing a Spanish dollar (the Real de a Ocho) into eight wedge-shaped segments. The coin was worth eight Spanish reales, thus each wedge was worth 1 reale or "a piece of eight". Two such pieces (or "two bits") became a common nickname for a quarter dollar.
As shown on the bottom reverse, it is a "quarter dollar" which is 1/4 of a dollar comprised of 100 cents (25 cents). The slang term "two bits" comes from the Spanish Dollar silver coins, which were each worth 8 reales (pieces of eight)...where one-fourth of that 'dollar' was 2 reales (bits).
In the US, a crochet is called a quarter note.
a quarter and a nickel . The quarter is not a nickel!
It all goes back to the pirates' "pieces of eight" which referred to the Spanish dollar which was worth eight reils. The Spanish dollar was legal tender in the US until the mid-1800's. At the same time the American dollar was equivalent to 4 quarters. Change for a dollar was often made by breaking or cutting the Spanish dollar into its eight pieces or "bits". By simple math 1 quarter was worth two pieces of eight or two bits. Two bits was 50 cents, six were 75 cents.
There are 119 ridges on a U.S. mint quarter. Also called "reeds"
Spanish coins are pieces of currency issued by the government of Spain for use as money. They typically feature symbols and designs representing Spain's rich history and culture.
Nickel and a quarter
They're called Washington quarters because they carry a picture of President George Washington
Do you mean "eagle quarter" or "quarter eagle"?There really isn't any US coin called an "eagle quarter"because ALL quarters up to 1998 had an eagle on the back.However, there WAS a coin called a "quarter eagle" - it was a gold coin with the somewhat strange denomination of $2.50 that was issued up till the US went off the gold standard in the early 1930s.
Two types of US quarters were struck in 1916 a Barber quarter and a Standing Liberty quarter. Post new question with type of coin please.
No. George Washington is on the US quarter.