You searched for: “money
money (s) (noun), moneys (or) monies (pl)
1. A medium that can be exchanged for goods and services and is used as a measure of their values on the market, including among its forms a commodity such as gold, an officially issued coin or note (paper), or a deposit in a checking account or other readily liquifiable account.
2. The official currency, coins, and negotiable paper notes issued by a government.
3. Assets and property considered in terms of monetary value; wealth.
4. Etymology: "mint, coinage, metal currency", from Old French moneie, from Latin moneta, "mint, coinage"; from Moneta, a cult title of the goddess Juno, in or near whose temple at Rome money was coined; perhaps from monere, "to advise, to warn" with the sense of referring to the "admonishing goddess".

Moneta, a name related to the goddess Juno

One of the epithets of the goddess Juno, the wife of Jupiter in Roman mythology, was Moneta.

When the Romans established a mint at the temple of Juno Moneta, this epithet, or name, became a generic Latin term for a place where money is made. The English words mint and money are both derived from Latin moneta.

The considerable difference between the two words may be accounted for by the widely different routs by which each came into English.

Mint has been proven to have existed in Old English in the form of mynet, and has been in the language since it first developed there and it comes from a primitive Germanic borrowing from Latin moneta which is also the source of Old High German munizza, "coin".

In Middle French, Latin moneta became moneie, which was then borrowed into Middle English in the form moneye and from which we now have incorporated the word "money".

Webster's Word Histories
Merriam-Webster, Inc., Publishers;
Springfield, Massachusetts; 1989; pages 308-309.

Another version regarding the origin of the word "money"

In Roman mythology, Juno Regina was supposed to be the wife of Jupiter and queen of the heavens. Juno assumed many characters and had a host of divine responsibilities.

She watched over women, protected maidenhood, guided girls through the rites of marriage and she was the savior, the war-goddess, and the moon-goddess; however, most important of all, she was the goddess of warning.

The Romans were so grateful to Juno for telling them about the dangers ahead on various occasions that they built a temple to her on the Capitoline Hill and when coinage was devised, they set their mint in her temple, and as Juno Moneta, the goddess became the guardian of finances.

Her name Moneta was derived from the Latin word moneo, "warn", and finally entered Old French as moneie; and therefore, eventually became our word money.

Through another path, this same word, moneta, came into Old English as mynet, which finally was transformed into the word mint, that place where money is made.

Word Origins and Their Romantic Stories
by Wilfred Funk; Grosset & Dunlap, Publishers;
New York; 1950; pages 120-121.
This entry is located in the following units: monstro-, monstr-, mone-, monu-, moni- (page 2) Quotes: Money (page 1)
Quotes: Money
The only thing that keeps your credit card in good standing: money quotes.
This entry is located in the following unit: Quotes: Quotations Units (page 5)
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Units related to: “money
(Latin: wealth, wealthy, rich; gain, profit, money; avarice)
(Latin: cattle, property in cattle; private property; money; particular)
(only thing that keeps your credit card in good standing)
(Greek > Italian: change; a fee charged by money brokers [changers] for exchanging money)
(Greek: acquisition of wealth by making money; transacting business to gain wealth; efforts made to possess goods and money; striving to be rich)
(secretly getting access to files on a computer or network in order to get information, to steal private information in order to illegally transfer money, or to cause damage, etc.)
(nano science and engineering prospects are providing incentives to invest time and money)
(Greek: sell, for sale; by extension, buy, purchase, pay for, invest money into)
(a political system that operates on a deficit and continues to print more and more money)
(Latin: loaning money at extremely high rates of interest; to use)
Word Entries containing the term: “money
A lot of money is tainted: It taint yours and it taint mine.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 1)
cash money
This entry is located in the following unit: Pleonasms or Tautological Redundancies (page 4)
Inflation: cutting money in half without damaging the paper.
Intaxication: euphoria at getting a refund from the IRS, which lasts until you realize it was your money to start with.
money mad
Lexicomedy: When we look at what's happening to our money, we get mad.
This entry is located in the following units: Dictionary with a Touch of Humor (page 5) monstro-, monstr-, mone-, monu-, moni- (page 2)
Word Entries at Get Words containing the term: “money
The love of money is the root of all evil (Timothy 6:10)
This entry is located in the following unit: Bible Quotations used in modern English (page 5)