1 US Dollars
How do you represent "$1" in the schema of a webpage?
An amount of money is represented by two properties, an amount and a currency.
In our case 1 is the amount. 1 refers to the natural number 1.
In this example, US Dollars is the currency. It refers to the currency of the United States of America. US Dollar amounts are rounded to two decimals. One US Dollar breaks into 100 cents.
Alternate names for 1 US Dollars
The currency symbol for the US dollar is "$". The currency code for the US dollar "USD". Besides the US dollar has some nicknames, such as greenback or buck. This makes a long list of alternate names for 1 US Dollars.
- $1
- $1
- 1 dollars
- 1 dollars
- 1 USD
- 1 bucks
Monetary Amount Schema
{
"@type": "MonetaryAmount",
"name": "$1",
"description": "An amount of $1 (US Dollars)",
"value": 1,
"currency": "USD",
"alternateName": [
"$1",
"$1",
"1 dollars",
"1 dollars",
"1 USD",
"1 bucks"
],
"sameAs": [
"https://missingentities.com/entities/monetary-amount/usd/1/"
]
}
Schema.org defines a specific schema type for a monetary amount. Its main attributes are currency and value to express a single amount of money.
The value attribute is a number.
The currency attribute uses ISO 4217 currency format as value, e.g. "USD".
How to use the Schema for 1 Dollars?
You can simply copy the schema above and paste it into the JSON-LD code of your schema definition. Use this monetary amount schema only in attributes that allow it, or your schema will be invalid.
Feel free to trim the list of alternate names, if some of these are not used in your context. However, if you use different names, feel free to add them to the list.
Monetary Amount Schema Generator
Go ahead, and generate the monetary amount schema for a different amount:
Contexts
Monetary amounts appear in different use cases throughout business, finance, and commerce.
Price Context
$1 could refer to a price for goods or services.
Payment Context
$1 could refer to a payment rendered for fulfillment of a contract.
Related Entities
You may not look for the schema for a monetary amount alone, but for something that is more of a quantitative value. Here are a few examples of money amounts in relation to different time periods.
- $1 per year, such as an annual salary.
- $1 per month, such as a monthly paycheck.
- $1 every two weeks, such as a bi-weekly paycheck.
- $1 every week, such as budgeting for a weekly expense.
- $1 per hour, such as a wage paid for hourly work.