You use the other side of the coin to mention a different aspect of a situation. These findings are a reminder that low pay is the other side of the coin of falling unemployment
The Costing and Information Project - managed together with AIMS during the duration of the AIMS Project
1) A piece of metal with its commodity type, weight and fineness stated on its face; an item of intrinsic value based in the unconditional, historical domain and often used as a medium of exchange 2) Monetized bullion or other forms of money manufactured from gold, silver, platinum, palladium, or other metals now or in the future and used as a medium of exchange in the United States or in any foreign nation
metal currency issued by a governmental authority as legal tender Some companies, issue "coins" as well, but these are not legal tender and are generally considered less collectible than real money
You say `to coin a phrase' to show that you realize you are making a pun or using a cliché. Fifty local musicians have, to coin a phrase, banded together to form the Jazz Umbrella
Metal formed into a disk of standardized weight and stamped with a standard design to enable it to circulate as money authorized by a government body
- By 1830, COIN, PURE COIN, DOLLAR, STANDARD, PREMIUM or the letters C or D were used to indicate 900/1000 parts of silver (Some lesser amounts such as 800 were also considered coin)