Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
They pay me two groschen a week, besides my keep.
Coins under 10 groschen were rarely seen in circulation during their final years.
As a dowry, she received the amount of 60 Prague groschen.
Its owner finds four silver groschen in his pocket every morning."
In one was my piece of money, in the other lay four silver groschen.
At that time, Shapiro conceived the idea of contributing daily groschen to help raise money for the building.
The type was copied elsewhere in Europe and became widely known as Groschen.
This stamp has a nominal value of 8+2 g (Groschen).
Later the tradition of Groschen was dropped in most states while others continued to mint only coins smaller than the original coin.
Austria introduced the Groschen in 1924 as the subdivision of the Schilling.
The schilling was divided into 100 Groschen.
Both usages are only regional and may not be understood in areas where a Groschen coin did not exist before 1871.
The inspiration came from France where groschen were used since 1266, and replaced old coins called denar.
After a ransom of 500 half groschen was paid, Lengvenis returned to his devastated estate.
Coins were also issued denominated in Groschen.
It cost 8,230 thalers, 18 groschen and 9 pfennigs.
Fifty groschen for ten seconds!
In colloquial German the 10 pfennig coin was sometimes called a groschen (cf. groat).
In 1547, minting of Prague groschen was discontinued by Ferdinand I.
The authorities secured the original find (a vase filled with approximately 3,000 Prague groschen), however, no serious archaeological study was carried out at that time.
In the case of the failure to pay one of the installments, the indemnities were to rise by an additional 720,000 Prague groschen.
The sale was for 6000 Prager Groschen.
Bohemia (since 1300, the Prague groschen, later adopted by most of the Central European countries)
In 1925, a new monetary system was introduced, 100 groschen to the schilling, which continued in use until replaced by the euro in 2002.
Consequently, the new 10 pfennig coins were equivalent to the old Groschen of northern Germany and this became a nickname for the denomination.