Grosh - Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary. Maxim Semelak The last penny of the soul

    Husband. two kopecks, copper two-kopeck piece; With the transfer of the bill to silver, this name goes out of use, like money, half. | Penny or more pennies south money in general; | tax, see kopeck. Good value for money everywhere. I didn’t buy it for my own money... ... Dictionary Dahl

    - (German Groschen). Coin in Russia and Poland is copper = 1/2 kopeck; in the old days, a copper coin of 2 kopecks in banknotes; in Germany, silver (silbergroschen) = 1/30 thaler = 3 kopecks; also a coin in Spain, Switzerland, Italy. Dictionary of foreign words,... ... Dictionary of foreign words of the Russian language

    PENNY, ah, husband. 1. An ancient copper coin of two kopecks, later half a kopeck. Not a penny (no money at all; colloquial). G. price to whom what n. or g. copper (broken) price to anyone for anything n. or not worth a copper (broken) penny (worth nothing, nowhere... ... Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

    Lost for nothing. They ruined him for nothing. See Woe Trouble...

    At the age of seven, seventy-seven troubles were overcome. We live, we cough, we walk, we limp. With cough in bite, with dandruff in bite. Every day is joy, but the tears never diminish. Whatever happens next is better, and you won’t end up crying. Our life (or: life, life)… … IN AND. Dahl. Proverbs of the Russian people

    What you don’t look for, you won’t find (you won’t find it). Whoever seeks will find it, but to the one who seeks it will be opened. Seek and you will find, push and it will be opened. Whatever you go for, you will find. Whoever goes for something will find it. If you go for the bad, you will find the bad. Language to Kyiv... ... IN AND. Dahl. Proverbs of the Russian people

    The poor man even smokes censer. It is better to serve through the threshold than to stand at the threshold. It's better to serve out the window than to stand under the window. God forbid you give, God forbid you take (i.e. alms). God forbid to give, God forbid to accept! The rich get old, and the poor... IN AND. Dahl. Proverbs of the Russian people

    The century will stretch, everyone (everyone) will get it. It doesn't come day after day. Day after day does not happen, hour after hour does not fall. Anything can happen in the world (and it also happens that nothing happens). Mountain does not meet mountain, but man does not meet man (or: but a pot with... ... IN AND. Dahl. Proverbs of the Russian people

    Cross yourself and get some sleep! Bow to Makar, and Makar to seven sides. I started with the spirit and ended with the belly. He sits in trouble and smokes trouble. He conceived for health, and brought him together for peace. Neither out of the box, nor into the box. Doesn't fit into the box, doesn't come out of the box, and doesn't give up the box. No dignity... IN AND. Dahl. Proverbs of the Russian people

    Masterforex-V- (Masterforex 5) Masterforex V is an online training project in the field of the Forex currency market. Exposure of the Masterforex V training project, the organizer and teachers of the Masterforex 5 fraudulent academy, methods of deceiving the project’s clients... ... Investor Encyclopedia

Silver coin, minting of which began in Italy at the end of the 12th century. In Russia, the penny appeared in the 17th century. as a small change and then took its place in the form copper coin worth 2 kopecks...

Large economic dictionary

  • - The first pennies were coined at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslaus II; these were large silver coins, minted from 14-tilot silver, weighing 1/4 of a lot each...

    encyclopedic Dictionary Brockhaus and Euphron

  • - coins from different times and countries. Coinage coinage began in Italy in the 12th century, and in many European countries. countries - in the 13-14th centuries. Initially G. was large silver coin...

    Great Soviet Encyclopedia

  • - coins from different times and countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17-18 centuries. double copper, from the 19th century. half-penny coin. Modern small change coin of Poland and Austria; 1 penny - 1/100 of a shilling)...

    Large encyclopedic dictionary

  • - husband. two kopecks, copper two-kopeck piece; With the transfer of the bill to silver, this name goes out of use, like money, half. | Penny or more pennies south money in general; | tax, see kopek...

    Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - noun, m., used. compare often Morphology: what? and a penny, why? I have a penny, what? a penny, what? oh and penny, about what? about e and about a penny...

    Dmitriev's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - Borrowing from Polish, where grosz in turn is a borrowing from Czech, and goes back through German to the Latin grossus denarius - “heavy coin”. It is curious that the components of this combination are familiar to us...

    Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language by Krylov

  • - I, R. a/, TV. o/m; pl. i/, R. e/y II, TV. gro/shem...

    Spelling dictionary of the Russian language

  • - -and husband. 1. An ancient copper coin of two kopecks, later half a kopeck. Not a penny. D. price to someone. or g. copper price to someone. or not worth a penny. Don't put anyone in the city. ...

    Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - a penny, husband. 1. A coin worth half a penny. 2. more often plural. Little money, insignificant price. This work is not profitable: it pays a pittance. It costs pennies. Buy or sell something for a penny or a pittance...

    Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - penny I m. Copper coin in denomination of two kopecks, later - half a kopeck. II predic. decomposition 1. An assessment of any amount of money as very small; pennies. 2...

    Explanatory Dictionary by Efremova

  • - See ABUSE -...

    IN AND. Dahl. Proverbs of the Russian people

  • - Eagle. Do not receive benefits from the exchange. SOG 1994, 125...

    Large dictionary of Russian sayings

  • "not for a penny" in books

    COPPER PENNY

    From the book Remember, You Can't Forget author Kolosova Marianna

    COPPER PENNY There is not a path left, not a trace of those who have gone into the unknown forever. Were. Lived. And everyone left somewhere, From loved ones, from friends and from the earth. And the fields are green, as before, and the forests are dense and dark. Where there were Old Believer hermitages, Nowadays there are grasses and azure flowers. There

    Benedikt Sarnov I DON’T PUT THE WRITERS’ UNION AT A DIME

    From the book Transparent Stars. Absurd dialogues author Yulis Oleg

    Benedikt Sarnov I DO NOT REPUT THE WRITERS' UNION IN ANY WAY - Most of the actors with whom I have spoken claim that they find in themselves the character traits of most of the characters they play. Tell us, how did the relationship between the famous literary critic develop?

    author Dotsenko Vitaly Dmitrievich

    “...BUT AS A NAVAL COMMANDER, HIS WORTH IS A PENNY!”

    From the book Myths and Legends of the Russian Navy author Dotsenko Vitaly Dmitrievich

    “...BUT AS A NAVAL COMMANDER, HIS WORTH IS A PENNY!” Over the three-hundred-year history of its existence, the regular Russian fleet suffered only three major defeats: the first - at Rochensalm in 1790, when the commander of the Baltic galley fleet, Prince Nassau-Siegen, trying to please

    Grosh

    From the book Encyclopedic Dictionary (G-D) author Brockhaus F.A.

    Grosh Grosh. – The first pennies were struck at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslaus II (1191 – 1194); these were large silver coins, minted from 14 lots of silver, each weighing 1/4 lot (hence 84 fineness). Somewhat later G. Meissen and

    Moon and penny

    From the book All the masterpieces of world literature in brief. Plots and characters. Foreign literature of the 20th century. Book 1 author Novikov V.I.

    The Moon and Sixpence (The Moon and Sixpence) Novel (1919) After his death, the artist Charles Strickland was recognized as a genius, and, as is usually the case, everyone who saw him at least once rushes to write memoirs and interpret his work. Some people make Strickland a good-natured family man, a caring husband and

    Grosh

    From the book Great Soviet Encyclopedia (GR) by the author TSB

    Grosh Grosh (Polish, grosz, German Groschen, from Latin denarius grossus - heavy coin), coin of various times and countries. Coinage coinage began in Italy in the 12th century, and in many European countries. countries - in the 13-14th centuries. Initially, G. was a large silver coin. In the 14th-15th centuries. the weight and quality of metal in G. decreased, and it

    Prague groschen

    From the book Great Soviet Encyclopedia (PR) by the author TSB

    Happiness for a penny

    From the book New psychological tips for every day author Stepanov Sergey Sergeevich

    Happiness for a penny In the debate about whether money can make a person happy, many copies have been broken. The results of many psychological observations and experiments force us to at least partially recognize the old truth: “Money doesn’t buy happiness.” Proven: having escaped poverty,

    Chatter is worthless!

    From the book Rules. Laws of Success by Canfield Jack

    Chatter is worthless! To achieve success, you need to follow those who have already achieved it, and those who have achieved it are focused on vigorous activity. I have already explained how to think about your dreams and visions, set goals, break them down into smaller tasks, how

    All moral teachings are worthless

    From the book Black Swan [Under the Sign of Unpredictability] author Taleb Nassim Nicholas

    All moral teachings are worthless. Excessively equipping your texts with quotes from famous philosophers is a bad habit, unless, of course, you are going to laugh at the great ones or give historical information. Not that these sayings have no meaning, but the sonorous maxims

    Penny price

    From the book Letters to Presidents author Minkin Alexander Viktorovich

    Penny price February 20, 2009 Presidents, comrades Supreme Commanders, congratulations on your victory! Law and conscience have triumphed! For the first time, the court ruled: the state must pay the mother of a crippled soldier for moral damages. Until now, if it has been possible

    Penny price / Politics and economics / How much

    From the book Results No. 5 (2012) author's Itogi Magazine

    Penny price / Politics and economics / How much does 1 ruble per square meter cost - this is the annual rental rate for dilapidated buildings that are historical and architectural monuments, set by the Moscow government. But the only thing free is cheese in a mousetrap.

    Part three "Ah, sir, sir, there's not enough heat..."

    From the book Our Tireless Ark. Experience of overcoming adversity author Beylezon Svetlana Vitalievna

    Part three “Oh, sir, sir, there’s not a penny’s worth of heat…” Well, let’s be ashamed. Those who can’t will still not give anything, but what if someone hears and wants to help? I live on Leninsky. I went on a shopping trip to the big stores. I talked about our children. But I didn’t tell anyone

    Maxim Semelak The last penny of the soul

    From the book The Outback (November 2007) author Russian life magazine

    Maxim Semelak The last penny of the soul The Leningrad group is releasing a new album, “Aurora.” For a long time, Shnurov could not come up with a name. Initially, the title contained the word “Quadrille,” then the outlandish pun “Lyu.tse.her” arose. Having approved the final version of “Aurora”, Shnurov did not

    Dictionary of Russian synonyms:

    Grosh - || penniless, choke for a penny, not a penny, go down for a penny, sit penniless, make pennies

    Modern encyclopedic dictionary:

    GROSCH (from the Latin grossus - thick, large), coin of various countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17th - 18th centuries. double copper, from the 19th century. half-penny coin. Modern small change coins of Poland (1 groschen = 1/100 zloty) and Austria (German Groschen; 1 groschen = 1/100 shilling).

    Explanatory dictionary of the Russian language by D.N. Ushakov:

    GROSH, penny, m. 1. Coin, worth half a penny (obsolete). 2. more often plural. Little money, insignificant price. This work is not profitable: it pays a pittance. It costs pennies. Buy or sell something for a penny or a pittance. (very cheap, almost for nothing). Not a penny (colloquial) - no money at all. A copper or broken penny is the price of something or a penny (copper, broken) is not worth (colloquially ironic) - it is worth nothing, very bad, worthless. Not to give a penny to someone - not to respect anyone at all, not to take anyone or anything into account at all.

    New dictionary of the Russian language edited by T.F. Efremova:

    Grosh
    m.
    1) Copper coin of two kopecks in the Russian state 1654-1838. , later - half a kopeck in the Russian state 1838-1917. .
    2) transfer decomposition Very low price

    Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language by V.I. Dahl:

    ROSH m. two kopecks, copper two-kopeck piece; With the transfer of the bill to silver, this name goes out of use, like money, half. | Penny or more pennies south money in general; | tax, see kopeck. Good value for money everywhere. If you didn’t buy it for your own money, you won’t steal it. Give me a penny, and put the pig in the rye, and it will be good. Even if it’s a penny, it’s your own. If you have a penny, so will there be rye. It’s not your penny, so don’t steal it. Don’t say a word, just show me a penny. If there was rye in the bottom of the barrel, there would be a penny in my pocket. He doesn't give a damn about him. Not worth an iron penny. Not worth a penny. And the whole thing isn’t worth a penny. It's not worth a penny, but it looks like a ruble. To give a penny for it is not to give, but to give two is to pass on. There is neither a broken nor a blind penny. You won't spend a lot of money on a penny. They give him a penny, so he’s not good. The poor man has two pennies, otherwise he has a lot of money. Where you scratch with a fingernail, there is a penny (and a louse). Good: the devil gave a penny for it, but he went crazy! She walked well, but did not bow; gave a penny. Yes, she didn’t come back. Broke, crooked: a penny on the shelf! They give a penny to grind by calling someone to the hand millstone; a penny is mine, they say. , if someone lies well; here they are shallow in both senses. Not a penny of money, but fame is good. To a miser, a soul is worth less than a penny. There is no money to spare. Lost for nothing. They ruined him, not for a penny. For people, the penny is skipping, but for us (i.e., the stingy ones), the ruble is crying. You can’t sell him an altyn for a penny. Our profits are nothing but copper pennies. I bought it dashingly for my own pennies. For my money, but I’m not good. Don’t cry, rye that you sold for a penny: spring will come - I’ll pay double, and I’ll return it back! teasing a bad owner. Oh-oh, I’m walking, I’m changing pennies, I’m taking an altyn in change! The other day a little man came to exchange nickels for a penny. I've been borrowing money for transportation for a long time, but have nowhere to go. Everyone knows him like a penny. The magician is penniless, but the patient is no better off. In your mouth for a penny! Jokingly. Let's throw a penny into the hat! Let's cast lots. Stick a penny in someone's mouth, a poor man, to spite the rich man, sticks a penny in his hut, and he must go broke. A penny man, a penny man, a two-kopeck man. or penny, priced at a penny. You can’t make (bargain) a ruble from a penny product.

    See also `Grosh` in other dictionaries

    m. 1) Copper coin in denomination of two kopecks (in the Russian state 1654-1838), later - in half a kopeck (in the Russian state 1838-1917). 2) transfer decomposition Very low price

    m. two kopecks, copper two-kopeck piece; With the transfer of the bill to silver, this name goes out of use, like money, half. | Penny or more pennies south money in general; | tax, see kopeck. Good value for money everywhere. If you didn’t buy it for your own money, you won’t steal it. Give me a penny, and put the pig in the rye, and it will be good. Even if it’s a penny, it’s your own. If you have a penny, so will there be rye. It’s not your penny, so don’t steal it. Don’t say a word, just show me a penny. If there was rye in the bottom of the barrel, there would be a penny in my pocket. He doesn't give a damn about him. Not worth an iron penny. Not worth a penny. And the whole thing isn’t worth a penny. It's not worth a penny, but it looks like a ruble. To give a penny for it is not to give, but to give two is to pass on. There is neither a broken nor a blind penny. You won't spend a lot of money on a penny. They give him a penny, so he’s not good. The poor man has two pennies, otherwise he has a lot of money. Where you scratch with a fingernail, there is a penny (and a louse). Good: the devil gave a penny for it, but he went crazy! She walked well, but did not bow; gave a penny. Yes, she didn’t come back. Broke, crooked: a penny on the shelf! I'll give you a penny...

    GROSH (Polish grosz) - coin of various times and countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17-18 centuries. double copper, from the 19th century. half-penny coin. Modern small change coin of Poland (1 groschen = 1/100 zloty) and Austria (German: Groschen); 1 penny - 1/100 shilling).

    see shilling, thaler.

    1. Currency unit Italy (12th century).
    2. “Give me..., so you’ll be good” (last).
    3. The name of this coin comes from the German “Grosse” - size, since the size of these coins was larger than others.
    4. The name of this coin comes from the Latin word “big”, but we associate it with something very small, insignificant.
    5. “Broken” coin.
    6. Maugham’s novel “The Moon and...”.
    7. Very low price.
    8. Monetary unit of Russia (17-19 centuries).
    9. Monetary unit of Austria.
    10. Monetary unit of Poland.

    Grosh

    Russian coin equal to 1/2 kopeck.


    Reference commercial dictionary. - M.: Publication of the Central Union. Edited by prof. N.G. Filimonova. 1926 .

    A monetary unit in Russia in the 17th-18th centuries, equal to two kopecks, later - half a kopeck (1838-1917).

    a penny

    noun, m., used compare often

    Morphology: (no) what? penny And a penny, what? a penny And a penny, (see) what? penny, how? penniless And penniless, about what? about a penny And about a penny; pl. What? pennies And pennies, (no) what? pennies And pennies, what? pennies And pennies, (see) what? pennies And pennies, how? in pennies And in pennies, about what?<...>

    a penny genus. p. grosha, penny "coin of one penny", in Kotoshikhin (112), Ukrainian. Grish, blr. penny, in Western Russian. and Galician texts from the 14th century; see Cut. I, 598. Through Polish. grosz from old German Grosch, Groschen, which spread thanks to the Bohemian imperial chancellery and goes back to lat. (dēnarius) grossus; see Bernecker 1, 354; Kluge-Goetze 218 et seq. Etymological dictionary of the Russian language. - M.: Progress M. R. Vasmer 1964-1973

    Grosh

    The first pennies were coined at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslaus II (1191-1194); These were big silver coins minted from 14-tilot silver, weighing 1/4 of a lot each (hence 84 fineness). Somewhat later, G. Meissen and Thuringian appeared, and then Tours; the latter were minted by the French kings - in Tours. The very name of the coin (Groschen, Gros) comes from German. Grösse - value, since these coins had a larger value than others. Since the 13th century, paintings have become almost universal in Europe, especially in Germany, and they take on different names depending on the images placed on them: Schwerdgrogschen, Schildgroschen, Engelgroschen etc. During the Thirty Years' War...

    small change coin. G. appeared in Russia in the 17th century. and then took its place in the form of a copper coin of 2 kopecks.

    Grosh I B noun cm. _Appendix II

    (ancient coin)

    Grosha pl. pennies pennies

    there wasn’t a penny, but suddenly it was altyn (proverb)

    I know that in eternal spring

    The soul of birch trees blows,

    But a beard with gray hair,

    Youth with a song...

    Grosh

    in pennies

    (Source: “Complete accentuated paradigm according to A. A. Zaliznyak”)


    Grosh (Polish, grosz, German Groschen, from Latin denarius grossus - heavy coin)

    coins from various times and countries. Coinage coinage began in Italy in the 12th century, and in many European countries. countries - in the 13-14th centuries. Initially, G. was a large silver coin. In the 14th-15th centuries. the weight and quality of metal in G. decreased, and it turned into small change.

    In Russia, coinage of gold coins began in 1654. In the 17th and 18th centuries. Copper coins, equal to 2 kopecks, have been in circulation since the 19th century. G. were called half-kopecks. G. is a modern small change coin of Poland and Austria: Polish G. = 1/100 zloty (coins of 50, 20, 10, 5 and 1 G. circulate), Austrian. G. = 1/100 shilling (coins of 50, 20, 10, 2, 1 1/2 G. circulate). In a figurative sense, the term...

    PENNY

    Grosh cried what. Novg. Joking-iron. About a very small amount of smth. Sergeeva 2004, 164.

    Penny price [on market day] to whom; to what. Razg. Contempt. Smb., sth. no good, no value, no meaning. FSRYaa, 112; BMS 1998, 138; BTS, 230; Mokienko 1990, 118; ZS 1996, 33.

    The price is a penny and a fathom of firewood to whom; to what. Sib. Same. FSS, 49.

    It's worthless and out of the way. Sib. Contempt. About a person who does not know how to do the job he has taken on. FSS, 49.

    Tremble for a penny. Gorky Contempt. Be stingy. BalSok, 36.

    Broken penny. Psk. Not at all, absolutely nothing. POS 8, 42.

    Grosh

    a penny, -\"ah, creativity P.-\"ohm


    Russian spelling dictionary. / The Russian Academy of Sciences. Institute rus. language them. V. V. Vinogradova. - M.: "Azbukovnik". V. V. Lopatin (executive editor), B. Z. Bukchina, N. A. Eskova and others.. 1999 .

    GROSCH (from the Latin grossus - thick, large), coin of various countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17th - 18th centuries. double copper, from the 19th century. half-penny coin. Modern small change coins of Poland (1 groschen = 1/100 zloty) and Austria (German Groschen; 1 groschen = 1/100 shilling).

    Borrowing from Polish, where grosz in turn is a borrowing from Czech, and goes back through German to the Latin grossus denarius - “heavy coin”. It is curious that the components of this combination are familiar to us. The Latin grossus has penetrated into many European languages ​​with the meaning of “large,” and the word denarius is used, say, in the Gospel story called “Caesar’s denarius.”

    Domino