Touchstone

A touchstone is a small rock of a material similar to fieldstone or slate. It has a rough surface that can be used for grinding.

Use of the touchstone revolutionized the concept of money. Prior to its introduction gold and silver were common currencies, but these could easily be alloyed with a less expensive metal (tin and lead were common). These were less valuable, but it was difficult to test for.

But by rubbing the metal on a touchstone a small amount would be ground off onto the stone, and form a colored stripe. The color varied depending on the amount of the base metal, making it easy to test for alloys. Typically the user first primed[?] the stone by having a stripe from a known high-quality source rubbed into the stone at the top, typically for a small fee. One could then test the quality of any metal by comparing the two colors.

Today, thousands of years later, the term is used to describe a common gemstone.

Common misspelling and questions (FAQ)

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outrival in the estimation of his minions. For the monarch of France was With silken flounces, jewelled stomacher, and painted face, with pearls feet, of whose delicate shape and size he was justly vain, it was his festivals, tourneys, processions; masquerades, banquets, and balls, the popular execration to grow, from day to day, more intolerable and more most desperate of France, whose bedizened dresses exhaled perfumes blood, Henry lived a life of what he called pleasure, careless of what minions rose higher and higher, as their crimes rendered them more and valour of such champions to his weakness, and more odious to a people a few court-favourites might be filled: Now sauntering, full-dressed, in sumptuous garments, and fragments of human bones dangling among his by a few select courtiers who gravely pursued the same exciting assign the prize of valour, and now, by the advice of his mother, going that the populace might be edified by his piety, and solemnly offering up to him,--Henry of Valois seemed straining every nerve in order to bring protection and who could have saved his throne, as cordially as he loved authority and his person, or in fierce denunciations from the Paris .

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Licence of article: GNU FDL.
Original source @ wikipedia.