Moneta - translation to french
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Moneta - translation to french

EPITHET OF JUNO AND MNEMOSYNE
Juno Moneta; Diva Moneta
  • $50 banknote]].
  • A bust of Juno Moneta on a denarius

Moneta         
Moneta, family name; Ernesto Teodoro Moneta (1833-1918), Italian journalist, Nobel Peace Prize winner of 1907
Ernesto Teodoro Moneta         
Ernesto Teodoro Moneta (1833-1918), Italian journalist, Nobel Peace Prize winner of 1907
monétariser      
monetarize, mint money; authorize money for legal use; attributing the characteristics of money to something

Wikipedia

Moneta

In Roman mythology, Moneta (Latin Monēta) was a title given to two separate goddesses: It was the name of the goddess of memory (identified with the Greek goddess Mnemosyne), and it was an epithet of Juno, called Juno Moneta (Latin Iūno Monēta). The latter's name is the source of numerous words in English and the Romance languages, including “money" and "mint".

The cult of the goddess Moneta was established largely under the influence of Greek religion, which featured the cult of Mnemosyne ("Μνημοσύνη"), the goddess of memory and the mother of the Muses. The goddess's name is derived from Latin monēre (which means to remind, warn, or instruct). She is mentioned in a fragment of Livius Andronicus' Latin Odyssey: Nam diva Monetas filia docuit ("since the divine daughter of Moneta has taught...", frg. 21 Büchner), which may be the equivalent of either Od. 8,480-1 or 488.

The epithet Moneta that was given to Juno, in contrast, is more likely to have derived from the Greek word "moneres" ("μονήρης"), meaning "alone”, or “unique". By the time Andronicus was writing, the folk etymology of monēre was widely accepted, and so he could plausibly transmute this epithet into a reference to separate goddess - the literary (though not the religious) counterpart of the Greek Mnemosyne.