Crypto Glossary
95 essential terms — searchable, A-Z.
A
- Address
- A public identifier (like an account number) where crypto can be received. Derived from a public key.
- Airdrop
- Free distribution of tokens to wallet holders, often used to bootstrap a community or reward early users.
- Altcoin
- Any cryptocurrency that is not Bitcoin.
- AMM (Automated Market Maker)
- A type of DEX that uses liquidity pools and a formula to price assets, instead of an order book. Uniswap is the most famous example.
- APY
- Annual Percentage Yield. The total yearly return including compounding.
- ATH / ATL
- All-Time High / All-Time Low. The highest or lowest price an asset has ever reached.
B
- Bear market
- A prolonged period of declining prices, typically 20%+ from the highs, often with weak sentiment.
- Bitcoin (BTC)
- The first and most valuable cryptocurrency. Created in 2009 by Satoshi Nakamoto.
- Block
- A bundle of transactions added to the blockchain. Each block references the previous one cryptographically.
- Blockchain
- A distributed, append-only ledger maintained by a network of computers.
- Bridge
- A protocol that lets you move tokens from one blockchain to another.
- Bull market
- A sustained period of rising prices and positive sentiment.
- Burn
- Permanently destroying tokens by sending them to an unspendable address. Reduces supply.
C
- Candlestick
- A chart shape showing the open, high, low, and close price of an asset over a given time period.
- CEX
- Centralized Exchange. A company-run platform like Coinbase, Binance, or Kraken.
- Cold wallet
- An offline wallet (usually hardware) where private keys never touch the internet.
- Collateral
- Crypto pledged to back a loan in DeFi. Liquidated if the loan becomes too risky.
- Confirmation
- When a transaction is included in a block. More confirmations = more security.
- Custodial
- When a third party (exchange, app) holds your private keys for you.
D
- DAO
- Decentralized Autonomous Organization. A group governed by token-holder voting on-chain.
- DApp
- Decentralized Application. A frontend that interacts with smart contracts.
- DCA
- Dollar-Cost Averaging. Buying a fixed amount on a fixed schedule, regardless of price.
- DeFi
- Decentralized Finance. Banking-like services (lending, swapping, earning) built on smart contracts, without intermediaries.
- DEX
- Decentralized Exchange. A non-custodial swap protocol like Uniswap or Curve.
- Diamond hands
- Holding through volatility without selling. Opposite: paper hands.
- DYOR
- Do Your Own Research. A reminder not to follow random calls blindly.
E
- ERC-20
- The most common standard for fungible tokens on Ethereum.
- ERC-721
- The Ethereum standard for non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
- Ethereum (ETH)
- A smart-contract platform launched in 2015. The base layer for most DeFi and NFTs.
- Etherscan
- The most popular Ethereum block explorer. Lets you inspect any tx, address, or contract.
- EVM
- Ethereum Virtual Machine. The runtime where smart contracts execute. Many chains are 'EVM-compatible'.
F
- Faucet
- A site that gives away small amounts of (usually testnet) crypto for development or learning.
- FDV
- Fully Diluted Valuation. Price × Max Supply. Useful for spotting future inflation.
- Flash loan
- An uncollateralized loan that must be borrowed and repaid in a single transaction.
- Fork
- A change to a blockchain's rules. Can be 'soft' (compatible) or 'hard' (incompatible, may split the chain).
- FOMO
- Fear Of Missing Out. Buying because price is pumping, not because of conviction.
- FUD
- Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt. Negative narratives, sometimes spread maliciously.
G
- Gas
- The fee paid to execute a transaction on Ethereum or similar chains. Priced in gwei (1 gwei = 10⁻⁹ ETH).
- Genesis block
- The very first block on a blockchain.
H
- Halving
- Bitcoin's programmed event where block rewards are cut in half. Happens every ~4 years.
- Hash
- A unique cryptographic fingerprint of any data. Same input = same hash; tiny change = totally different hash.
- Hardware wallet
- A physical device that stores private keys offline. Examples: Ledger, Trezor.
- HODL
- Holding crypto long-term, ignoring short-term moves. Originally a typo of 'hold'.
- Hot wallet
- Software wallet connected to the internet (MetaMask, Phantom). Convenient, less secure.
I
- ICO / IDO / IEO
- Initial Coin / DEX / Exchange Offering. Different ways tokens are launched and sold.
- Impermanent loss
- Loss experienced by liquidity providers when token prices diverge from when they deposited.
K
- KYC
- Know Your Customer. Identity verification required by regulated exchanges.
L
- Layer 1 (L1)
- A base blockchain (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana). Settles its own transactions.
- Layer 2 (L2)
- A scaling solution built on top of an L1, batching transactions for lower fees and faster confirmation.
- Leverage
- Borrowing to amplify a position. Multiplies both gains and losses.
- Limit order
- An order that only fills at a specified price or better.
- Liquidation
- Forced closure of a leveraged position when collateral falls below the required threshold.
- Liquidity
- How easily an asset can be bought or sold without moving the price. High liquidity = tight spreads.
- Liquidity pool
- A smart contract holding two or more tokens, used by AMMs to price swaps.
- Long
- A position that profits if price goes up.
M
- Market cap
- Price × Circulating supply. A rough measure of a project's size.
- Market order
- An order that fills immediately at the best available price. Can suffer slippage.
- Mempool
- The waiting area for unconfirmed transactions before they're included in a block.
- Mining
- Securing a Proof-of-Work blockchain by solving cryptographic puzzles in exchange for rewards.
- Multisig
- A wallet that requires multiple keys (e.g., 2 of 3) to authorize a transaction.
N
- NFT
- Non-Fungible Token. A unique on-chain token that can represent art, collectibles, memberships, and more.
- Node
- A computer running blockchain software, validating and broadcasting transactions.
- Nonce
- A counter included in transactions to prevent replay attacks.
O
- Oracle
- A service that feeds real-world data (prices, scores) to smart contracts. Chainlink is the largest.
- Order book
- A list of all open buy and sell orders. Used by CEXs and some DEXs.
P
- Paper hands
- Selling at the first sign of trouble. Opposite: diamond hands.
- Peg
- A target price a stablecoin tries to maintain (usually $1).
- Phishing
- A scam attempting to trick you into entering credentials or signing malicious transactions.
- Private key
- A secret number that proves ownership of an address. NEVER share it.
- Proof of Stake (PoS)
- A consensus mechanism where validators lock up coins to validate blocks. Used by Ethereum, Solana, Cardano.
- Proof of Work (PoW)
- A consensus mechanism where miners solve puzzles to validate blocks. Used by Bitcoin.
- Public key
- Derived from the private key. Safe to share. Used to generate addresses.
- Pump and dump
- Coordinated price spike followed by mass selling. Often a scam.
R
- ROI
- Return On Investment.
- Rug pull
- When a project team takes investors' money and disappears.
S
- Satoshi (sat)
- The smallest unit of Bitcoin. 1 BTC = 100,000,000 sats.
- Seed phrase
- 12 or 24 words that back up your entire wallet. Lose them = lose your funds.
- Shitcoin
- Slang for low-quality, hype-driven cryptocurrencies.
- Short
- A position that profits if price goes down.
- Slashing
- A penalty in PoS systems where a validator loses part of their stake for misbehaving.
- Slippage
- The difference between expected and actual fill price, common with low liquidity.
- Smart contract
- A self-executing program stored on a blockchain.
- Stablecoin
- A token pegged to a stable asset, usually the US dollar.
- Staking
- Locking up coins to help secure a PoS network and earn rewards.
- Stop-loss
- An order that sells automatically if price drops to a set level.
T
- Testnet
- A development blockchain where tokens have no real value. Used to test code.
- Token
- A digital asset issued on top of a blockchain (vs. a 'coin' which is the chain's native asset).
- TVL
- Total Value Locked. The amount of crypto deposited in a DeFi protocol.
V
- Validator
- A node that helps secure a Proof-of-Stake network by proposing and attesting blocks.
- Volatility
- How much an asset's price moves over time. Crypto is famously volatile.
W
- WAGMI / NGMI
- We're All Gonna Make It / Not Gonna Make It. Crypto Twitter memes about confidence.
- Wallet
- Software or hardware that stores your private keys and lets you sign transactions.
- Whale
- An individual or entity holding a very large amount of a coin.
Y
- Yield farming
- Stacking DeFi strategies (lending + LP + rewards) to maximize returns.
Z
- ZK proof
- Zero-Knowledge proof. Cryptographically proves a statement is true without revealing the data behind it.