Learn the lingo
Crypto Glossary
101 crypto and blockchain terms, explained in plain English.
#
A
Address
A unique string of characters that identifies a wallet on a blockchain, used to send and…
Airdrop
An airdrop is a free distribution of tokens to users, often to reward early adopters, decentralise…
Altcoin
"Altcoin" means any cryptocurrency other than Bitcoin — short for "alternative coin." The term spans thousands…
AML
Anti-Money Laundering — rules and processes that prevent crypto from being used to launder illicit funds.
AMM
An Automated Market Maker is a type of decentralized exchange that prices assets with a mathematical…
APY
APY (annual percentage yield) is the real rate of return over a year, including the effect…
Arbitrage
Profiting from price differences for the same asset across markets. Traders buy where it is cheaper…
ATH
ATH stands for all-time high — the highest price an asset has ever reached. Traders watch…
B
Bear Market
A bear market is a prolonged period of falling prices and pessimism, often defined as a…
Bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC) is the first and largest cryptocurrency, created in 2009 by the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto.…
Block
A batch of validated transactions added to a blockchain. Each block references the previous one, forming…
Block Reward
The new coins paid to a miner or validator for adding a block. For Bitcoin, this…
Blockchain
A blockchain is a shared, append-only digital ledger duplicated across thousands of computers, or nodes. Transactions…
Bull Market
A bull market is a sustained period of rising prices and optimism. In crypto these moves…
Burn
Permanently removing tokens from circulation by sending them to an unspendable address. Burning reduces supply and…
C
Cap
Short for market capitalization, or a maximum supply limit such as Bitcoin's 21 million cap.
Cold Wallet
A cold wallet keeps crypto private keys completely offline — typically on a dedicated hardware device…
Confirmation
Each new block added after a transaction, increasing the certainty that it is final.
Consensus
The mechanism a blockchain uses to agree on the valid state of the ledger. Common models…
Custodial
Describes a service that holds your private keys for you, such as most exchanges. Non-custodial means…
Custody
The safekeeping of crypto assets and their private keys, whether by the owner or a third…
D
DAO
A DAO (decentralised autonomous organisation) is a community-run entity governed by rules written in smart contracts…
DApp
A decentralized application that runs on a blockchain via smart contracts, rather than on a single…
Decentralization
Distributing control across many participants instead of a single authority — a core goal of blockchains.
DeFi
DeFi (decentralised finance) recreates financial services — lending, borrowing, trading and earning yield — using smart…
DEX
A DEX (decentralised exchange) lets users trade crypto directly from their wallets via smart contracts, with…
Diamond Hands
Slang for an investor who holds through volatility without selling. The opposite is paper hands.
Difficulty
A measure of how hard it is to mine a new block on a proof-of-work network.…
Dominance
The share of total crypto market capitalization held by a single asset, most often quoted as…
Double Spend
The risk of spending the same crypto twice. Blockchains prevent it through consensus and confirmations.
E
ERC-20
The most common token standard on Ethereum, defining how fungible tokens behave so wallets and apps…
ETF
An Exchange-Traded Fund — a regulated investment vehicle; a spot crypto ETF holds the underlying asset…
Ethereum
Ethereum (ETH) is the leading smart-contract platform, launched in 2015. It lets developers build decentralised apps,…
Exchange
A platform for buying, selling and trading crypto. Exchanges can be centralized (CEX) or decentralized (DEX).
F
FDV
Fully Diluted Valuation — an asset's market cap if its entire maximum supply were in circulation…
Fiat
Government-issued currency such as the US dollar or euro, not backed by a commodity.
FOMO
Fear Of Missing Out — the emotional urge to buy an asset that is rising quickly,…
Fork
A change to a blockchain's rules. A soft fork is backward-compatible; a hard fork creates a…
FUD
Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt — negative information, sometimes spread deliberately, that pressures prices lower.
G
Gas
Gas is the fee paid to process a transaction on a blockchain such as Ethereum, compensating…
Genesis Block
The very first block of a blockchain.
Governance Token
A token that grants voting rights over a protocol's decisions and upgrades.
Gwei
A small denomination of ETH used to price gas. One Gwei equals 0.000000001 ETH.
H
Halving
The halving is a scheduled event, roughly every four years, when the block reward for mining…
Hash
The fixed-length output of a cryptographic function. Blockchains use hashes to link blocks and secure data.
Hash Rate
The total computing power securing a proof-of-work network. A higher hash rate generally means greater security.
HODL
HODL is crypto slang for holding an asset for the long term rather than selling. It…
Hot Wallet
A wallet connected to the internet, convenient for spending but more exposed than a cold wallet.
I
K
L
Layer 1
A base blockchain such as Bitcoin, Ethereum or Solana that settles transactions on its own network.
Layer 2
A network built on top of a Layer 1 to increase speed and lower fees, settling…
Ledger
A record of transactions. A blockchain is a distributed ledger shared across many nodes.
Lightning Network
A Layer-2 payment network on Bitcoin enabling fast, low-cost transactions off the main chain.
Liquidity
Liquidity describes how easily an asset can be bought or sold without moving its price. Deep…
Liquidity Pool
A smart-contract reserve of tokens that powers trading on automated market makers. Providers earn fees for…
Long
A position that profits if the price rises. The opposite is a short.
M
Mainnet
A blockchain's live, production network where real transactions occur, as opposed to a testnet.
Market Cap
Market capitalisation is a cryptocurrency live price multiplied by its circulating supply. It is the standard…
Market Order
An instruction to buy or sell immediately at the best available price. A limit order sets…
Maximalist
Someone who believes one cryptocurrency, usually Bitcoin, is superior to all others.
Mempool
The waiting area for transactions that have been broadcast but not yet included in a block.
Metaverse
Shared, persistent virtual worlds, often using blockchain for digital ownership of assets and identity.
Mining
Mining is the process that secures proof-of-work blockchains like Bitcoin. Miners compete to solve a hard…
Mint
To create a new token or NFT on a blockchain.
N
O
P
Paper Hands
Slang for an investor who sells quickly at the first sign of trouble.
Peg
A fixed value an asset aims to track, such as a stablecoin pegged to one US…
Permissionless
Open for anyone to use without approval — a core property of public blockchains.
Private Key
A private key is the secret cryptographic code that proves ownership of crypto and authorises transactions…
Proof of Stake
Proof-of-stake (PoS) secures a blockchain by having validators lock up, or stake, the network token as…
Proof of Work
Proof-of-work (PoW) is the consensus mechanism that secures Bitcoin. Miners expend computing power to solve puzzles…
Public Key
The cryptographic counterpart to a private key, from which a wallet address is derived and which…
Pump and Dump
A manipulative scheme that inflates an asset's price with hype before insiders sell into the buying.
R
S
Satoshi
The smallest unit of Bitcoin, equal to one hundred-millionth of a BTC. Named after Bitcoin's creator.
Seed Phrase
A seed phrase, or recovery phrase, is a list of 12 or 24 words that backs…
Sharding
Splitting a blockchain into smaller pieces (shards) that process transactions in parallel to improve scalability.
Short
A position that profits if the price falls.
Slippage
The difference between the expected price of a trade and the price actually executed, often larger…
Smart Contract
A smart contract is self-executing code stored on a blockchain that runs automatically when its conditions…
Stablecoin
A stablecoin is a cryptocurrency designed to hold a steady value, usually pegged one-to-one to a…
Staking
Staking means locking up cryptocurrency to help secure a proof-of-stake blockchain and, in return, earning rewards.…
Supply
The number of coins in existence. Circulating supply is what is publicly available; max supply is…
T
Testnet
A trial network that mirrors a blockchain for testing, using valueless tokens.
Token
A digital asset issued on an existing blockchain, as opposed to a coin that has its…
Tokenomics
Tokenomics — token economics — describes how a crypto token is designed: its total and circulating…
TPS
Transactions Per Second — a measure of a blockchain's throughput.
TVL
Total Value Locked — the total assets deposited in a DeFi protocol, used to gauge its…
V
W
Wallet
A crypto wallet stores the private keys that control your coins — it does not hold…
Web3
A vision of an internet built on blockchains, where users own their data, assets and identity…
Wei
The smallest denomination of ETH, equal to 0.000000000000000001 ETH.
Whale
A whale is an individual or entity holding a very large amount of a cryptocurrency —…
Whitepaper
A document outlining a crypto project's purpose, technology and tokenomics.