Used in a Sentence

denarii

Definition, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for denarii.

Editorial note

During the republic (509 BC–27 BC), a legionary earned 112.5 denarii per year (0.3 denarii per day).

Examples17
Definitions1
Parts of speech1

Quick take

(Ancient Rome, numismatics) A small silver coin issued both during the Roman Republic and during the Roman Empire, equal to 10 asses or 4 sesterces. Roughly one day’s wage for a skilled worker.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of denarii gathered in one view.

noun

(Ancient Rome, numismatics) A small silver coin issued both during the Roman Republic and during the Roman Empire, equal to 10 asses or 4 sesterces. Roughly one day’s wage for a skilled worker.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for denarii.

noun

(Ancient Rome, numismatics) A small silver coin issued both during the Roman Republic and during the Roman Empire, equal to 10 asses or 4 sesterces. Roughly one day’s wage for a skilled worker.

Example sentences

1

During the republic (509 BC–27 BC), a legionary earned 112.5 denarii per year (0.3 denarii per day).

2

Based on what Wikipedia says about denarii those 1350 denarii per year would be just over 118 g of silver per week.

3

In the Augustean system, 1 aureus = 25 denarii = 100 sestertii (not 1000 sestertii as stated above).

4

No one needs 4 liters of salt per week [...] Isn't the same true for pay in denarii?

5

All these discrepancies make it impossible to compute any sort of exchange rate between dollars and denarii.

6

And as inflation ravaged the Empire a single aureus gradually came to be worth thousands of denarii.

7

The price edicts also caps the wages of semi skilled labourers at 50 denarii per DAY.

8

Originally the highest two classes, comprising those with at least 10,000 denarii in assets, controlled an outright majority of the votes.

9

Then we look at the cost of a average small villa in that time period- 200,000 denarii.

10

Just to give some context: a single talent was worth about 6,000 denarii.

11

For instance, the person that sold me Roman denarii for U.

12

Wikipedia notes that, on issuance, Constantine's solidus was worth 275,000 denarii.

Quote examples

1

According to the "Pay in the Roman army", Wikipedia [0]: in 235AD, a legionary was paid about 1350 denarii per year.

2

I cannot find the price of salt in Wikipedia, but according to the "Roman goods prices" [1]: in 301AD, price of salt was capped to 100 denarii for about 17 liters of salt.

3

> "By what right can he displace me from this my seat?" he had to ask them and they would reply: "He will pay you sixty denarii and he will give you your home free and without tribute".

4

I don't know how accurate the numbers are, but a quick Google says Roman villas cost 200k-2M denarii[0][1], while Wikipedia says of currency and pay: """ It is difficult to give even rough comparative values for money from before the 20th century, as the range of products and services available for purchase was so different.

Proper noun examples

1

Julius Caesar's professional soldiers and Denarii.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use denarii in a sentence?

During the republic (509 BC–27 BC), a legionary earned 112.5 denarii per year (0.3 denarii per day).

What does denarii mean?

(Ancient Rome, numismatics) A small silver coin issued both during the Roman Republic and during the Roman Empire, equal to 10 asses or 4 sesterces. Roughly one day’s wage for a skilled worker.

What part of speech is denarii?

denarii is commonly used as noun.