From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishflorinflor‧in /ˈflɒrɪn $ ˈflɔː-, ˈflɑː-/ noun [countable] a coin that was used in Britain before 1971, worth about 10p
Examples from the Corpus
florin• It had promised him 1000 florins a year in a year's time.• His salary - 150 florins a year - was modest, but reasonable for a 16-year-old.• It had over 20 performances in Vienna alone, and brought Mozart 1,200 florins in the first two days.• A florin hovered in his hand and a look of indecision wrinkled his brow.• In the early sixteenth century the family assets were estimated at more than sixty-three million florins.• The florin and the ducat were seemingly equivalent coins, the former more used in Tuscany and the latter in Venice.