Obs. rare. [ad. L. type *currentia, f. current-em, pr. pple. of currĕre to run: see -ENCE. Cf. obs. F. courance.] = CURRENCY.
1651. N. Bacon, Disc. Govt. Eng., II. vii. (1739), 44. For the fuller currence of the Money.
1854. Frasers Mag., XLIX. 6. The time will not have been lost, if it only strips the argument of all sentimentalism and false currence.