See also: tomín

English

edit

Etymology

edit

From Spanish tomín, from Andalusian Arabic ثُمْن (ṯúmn), from Arabic ثُمْن (ṯumn, one-eighth), from the root ن (n) م (m) ث (ṯ-m-n). Originally used in reference to it forming one-eighth of a castellano.

Noun

edit

tomin (plural tomins or tomines)

  1. (historical) A traditional Spanish unit of mass, equivalent to about 0.6 g.
  2. (historical) A former gold Spanish coin, notionally equivalent to a tomin in weight.
  3. (historical) A former silver colonial Spanish coin, notionally equivalent to a gold tomin in value.

Synonyms

edit

Coordinate terms

edit

Catalan

edit

Verb

edit

tomin

  1. inflection of tomar:
    1. third-person plural present subjunctive
    2. third-person plural imperative

Central Nahuatl

edit

Noun

edit

tomin

  1. coin.

Classical Nahuatl

edit

Etymology

edit

From Spanish tomín, from Arabic ثُمْن (ṯumn, one-eighth).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

tomīn (inanimate)

  1. coin

Derived terms

edit

Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl

edit

Noun

edit

tomin

  1. money.

Japanese

edit

Romanization

edit

tomin

  1. Rōmaji transcription of とみん