How to Use coin in a Sentence
- I have a dollar in coins.
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The 49ers won the coin toss and elected to receive the ball in overtime.
— Marlow Stern, Rolling Stone, 12 Feb. 2024 -
The Grizzlies won a coin flip with the Cavaliers and will have the 25th pick.
— Dustin Dopirak, The Indianapolis Star, 17 Apr. 2023 -
And, thanks to the deals, the surplus of coins can go right back into the fund for next year.
— Sarah Han, Allure, 19 Nov. 2023 -
At Mischa, those two ideas are flip sides of the same coin.
— Tori Latham, Robb Report, 19 Apr. 2023 -
Imagine that the weight of the coin is controlled by a dial.
— Quanta Magazine, 18 Dec. 2023 -
During the coin toss, the 49ers decided to possess the ball first.
— Jordan Greene, Peoplemag, 23 Feb. 2024 -
That’s because blockchain is now filled up with NFTs and meme coins.
— Justin Ray, Robb Report, 10 May 2023 -
Save your coins, sis! Picnic in one of New York City’s parks.
— Felice León, Essence, 1 Sep. 2023 -
Those odds are in play if every game was a coin flip – or a fair 50/50 shot.
— Christopher Brito, CBS News, 21 Mar. 2024 -
Who knows, maybe Lohan is gonna get her wish through a gold coin.
— Vulture, 22 Jan. 2024 -
The price of ether, the coin tied to ethereum, rose rapidly after the bitcoin ETF approvals.
— Zachary Halaschak, Washington Examiner, 11 Jan. 2024 -
There’s another side to the coin that’s a little scary.
— Evan Minsker, Pitchfork, 19 Oct. 2023 -
The other side of that coin is having someone who would go to bat for you.
— Lauren Wickstead, Forbes, 28 Nov. 2023 -
There's lots of space to store credit cards, business cards, cash and even a few coins.
— Kristine Solomon, Travel + Leisure, 12 Sep. 2023 -
But the opposite side of the coin is the social expense and the awkwardness.
— Simon Vozick-Levinson, Rolling Stone, 9 Nov. 2023 -
Colorado won the overtime coin toss and elected to give the ball to its offense first.
— Chantz Martin, Fox News, 15 Oct. 2023 -
The pair were buried with coins, gold earrings, glass bottles, a lamp and a necklace.
— Aspen Pflughoeft, Miami Herald, 12 Feb. 2024 -
The coin slot lights up red when one of the buttons is pressed, and the game's score can be rotated to increase it.
— Andrew Cunningham, Ars Technica, 22 May 2023 -
In most tennis matches, when a set moves to a tiebreaker, the outcome comes down to a flip of a coin.
— Matthew Futterman, New York Times, 11 June 2023 -
She has been tasked with finding gold coins amid the rubble without a grasp of the landscape.
— Jon Wilner, San Diego Union-Tribune, 7 Sep. 2023 -
The props include handouts and coins from the Fortune’s Wheel casino.
— Rob Wieland, Forbes, 23 Feb. 2024 -
On the other side of the coin, men with a more oily scalp may only be able to tolerate it once a week.
— Cristina Montemayor, Men's Health, 18 Aug. 2023 -
This all came to a head when investors decided to sell their coins on the exchange.
— Brandy Hadley, The Conversation, 7 Nov. 2023 -
On the flip side of the coin stand those clients determined to steer clear of any and all financial pitfalls.
— Todd Longwell, Variety, 8 Nov. 2023 -
The idea is that the government could mint a $1 trillion platinum coin and use it to avoid a default.
— Josh Boak, Fortune, 9 May 2023 -
One of the guests, Stephen Colbert, paid Fallon in pennies, dumping a bucket of the coins all over him.
— Brian Steinberg, Variety, 28 Feb. 2024 -
First, Biden could order the U.S. Mint to create something like a coin worth $1 trillion.
— Jacob Bogage, Washington Post, 3 May 2023 -
The coin ultimately gets stuck and the girls are not able to physically see anything.
— Kristina Behr, Parents, 15 Apr. 2024 -
On a Discord channel for the coin’s investors, legitimate queries were buried under a pile of spam.
— Joel Khalili, WIRED, 15 Apr. 2024
- The nation plans to coin more money.
- William Shakespeare is believed to have coined many words.
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This moon also is called a blue moon, the term coined for the second full moon in a month.
— Robert Higgs, cleveland, 30 Aug. 2023 -
In fact, it was coined not by an astronomer, but by an astrologer.
— Rachel Feltman, Popular Science, 7 Feb. 2020 -
To coin a phrase that fellow Hall of Famer made – Tupac Shakur called it a rose that rose from the concrete.
— Rolling Stone, 31 Oct. 2021 -
In Japan, a new word has been coined, on-nomi (オン飲み), which refers to drinking with friends online.
— Esther Mobley, SFChronicle.com, 19 Mar. 2020 -
Yes, Week 1500 is yet another chance to coin new words, one that’s pretty clear on what to do.
— Pat Myers, Washington Post, 4 Aug. 2022 -
The slogan had yet to be coined, but the sentiment was certainly there.
— Miles Klee, Rolling Stone, 8 Apr. 2023 -
Astronomers first coined this term in the 1980s, but then, for decades, it was largely forgotten.
— Carlyn Kranking, Smithsonian Magazine, 13 Nov. 2023 -
Before anybody had thought to coin the term, the Meyer boys were homeschooled.
— Neal B. Freeman, National Review, 28 Aug. 2021 -
The matchup, coined as the Texas Throwdown, was a roller coaster that featured momentum swings and big plays from both teams.
— Joseph Hoyt, Dallas News, 3 Mar. 2020 -
Harold Shand, the Cockney gangster brought to snarling life by Bob Hoskins, is a man who knows how to coin a memorable phrase.
— Alison Willmore, Vulture, 22 Feb. 2021 -
In Week 1461 the Empress asked the Loser Community to coin words based on people’s names.
— Washington Post, 2 Dec. 2021 -
The term was first coined last year amid a rise in pink, following the Valentino fall 2022 collection and the first set photos from the Barbie movie.
— Frances Solá-Santiago, refinery29.com, 24 July 2023 -
The term supermoon was coined by astrologer Richard Noelle in 1979, but some believe the term is a bit misleading.
— Maggie Horton, Country Living, 20 July 2023 -
That phrase was first coined by legendary Ohio State football coach Woody Hayes, describing a tough style of running the ball.
— Los Angeles Times, 4 Mar. 2023 -
Some might refer to this as the last-mile problem or perhaps more aptly coin it as the last-step problem in this instance.
— Lance Eliot, Forbes, 16 June 2021 -
In this de facto role, Preskill has coined catchphrases to make concepts in the math-heavy field easier to grasp.
— Sophia Chen, Wired, 9 Mar. 2020 -
That bandwidth, though, as the Grossmont High School alum coined it, was tested like never before.
— Bryce Miller, San Diego Union-Tribune, 20 Feb. 2024 -
Global warming: The lab that coined the term has slowed its work during the coronavirus outbreak.
— Isabella Kwai, New York Times, 27 Apr. 2020 -
The Roman satirist Juvenal coined the phrase in his biting Tenth Satire: panem et circenses.
— Christopher Benfey, The New York Review of Books, 22 Jan. 2020 -
The incident led the Hunting Team to coin a term for the premature exposure of a weakness in a ransomware strain.
— Renee Dudley, ProPublica, 24 May 2021 -
Trump has famously coined nicknames for his opponents but hasn’t been on the receiving end of a moniker that has stuck.
— Alyssa Lukpat, WSJ, 28 Sep. 2023 -
Karissa Schaudt, colorist at Chicago's Maxine Salon, coined the term, and predicts the shade will be huge for 2020.
— Bella Cacciatore, Glamour, 8 Jan. 2020 -
The word altruism was coined around 1830 by French philosopher August Comte, as the opposite of egoism.
— Melissa Mohr, The Christian Science Monitor, 27 Apr. 2023 -
Experts have been forced to coin a new term for fires exceeding 1 million acres: gigafire.
— ProPublica, 16 Mar. 2024 -
Media coined breakdancing to explain the form more broadly.
— Sean Gregory, TIME, 5 Mar. 2024 -
Mandy sets out to find the owner of the book, letter, and coin with the help of Jonah (Bradford B. Johnson), a contractor who first came upon and donated the book.
— Dan Snierson, EW.com, 17 Sep. 2020 -
Singers and rappers, often raised in immigrant families, have coined new terms.
— Aurelien Breeden, New York Times, 26 Mar. 2024 -
It was coined by Richard Dawkins, the evolutionary biologist, to illustrate the idea of cultural replication.
— Dr. Marcus Collins, Forbes, 29 Mar. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'coin.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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