Obs. rare. [ad. L. type *currentia, f. current-em, pr. pple. of currĕre to run: see -ENCE. Cf. obs. F. courance.] = CURRENCY.

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1651.  N. Bacon, Disc. Govt. Eng., II. vii. (1739), 44. For the fuller currence of the Money.

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1854.  Fraser’s Mag., XLIX. 6. The time … will … not have been lost, if it only strips the argument of all sentimentalism and false currence.

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