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FINANCES

Volume 7 · 114 words · 1797 Edition

in the French policy, denote the revenues of the king and state: much the same with the treasury or exchequer of the English, and the fiscus of the Romans.—The word is derived from the German finanz, “scraping, urgency.” Though Du Cange chooses rather to deduce it from the barbarous Latin financia, praefatio pecuniaria.

Council of the Finances, corresponds to our lords-commissioners of the treasury: the comptroller-general of the finances, to our lord high treasurer, &c.

The French have a peculiar kind of figures, or numeral character, which they call chiffre de finance.

FINCH-kind, in ornithology, an appellation given to a genus of birds known among authors by the name of Fringilla. See that article.