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farthing Meaning in Bengali



 পেনির চতুর্থাংশ,

Noun:

পেনির চতুর্থাংশ,





farthing's Usage Examples:

Bicycles A penny-farthing in the Škoda Auto Museum, Czech Republic Two men ride penny-farthings in Santa Ana, California, 1886 A penny-farthing race at Crystal.


Porters Bar) and before that, the Farthing Pie House or Pye House as mutton pies could be bought there for a farthing.


The British farthing (1/4d) coin, from Old English fēorðing, from fēorða, a fourth, was a unit of currency of one quarter of a penny, equivalent to 1/960.


The British farthing (derived from the Old English feorthing, a fourth part) was a British coin worth a quarter of an old penny (1⁄960 of a pound sterling).


regional assemblies called farthing assemblies (fjórðungsþing) and regional courts called farthing courts (fjórðungsdómar).


Each farthing held three local assemblies.


The third farthing was a British coin (1/12 of a penny, 1/2880 of a pound) which was produced in various years between 1827 and 1913.


The British half farthing was a coin valued at 1/1,920 of a pound sterling, or one eighth of a penny.


The British quarter farthing (+1/16d) coin was a unit of currency equalling one sixteenth of a pre-decimal penny (+1/3,840 of a pound sterling).


very popular beginning in the late 1880s as an alternative to the penny-farthing ("ordinary") and is now the most common type of bicycle.


A farthing (derived from the Anglo-Saxon feorthing, a fourthling or fourth part) was a coin of the Kingdom of England worth one quarter of a penny, 1⁄960.


The silver three-farthing (3⁄4d) coin was introduced in Queen Elizabeth I's third and fourth coinages (1561–1582), as part of a plan to produce large quantities.


Farthing or farthings may refer to: Farthing (British coin), an old British coin valued one quarter of a penny Half farthing (British coin) Third farthing.



Synonyms:

coin;

Antonyms:

head; reverse;

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