More recently than that in the US to apply specifically to a laxative.
More recently than that in the US to apply specifically to a laxative.
I got it (49 is half of 98, plus 0.5) , but when I compete with the grocery store cash register, I'm always off by a dime, never a penny or a dollar.
Pressure, half of nine is 4, 99 is odd so needs a 0.5.
Quite interesting.
Half of nine is 4.5, not 4.
Pedant. First word is relevant.
Yes. Also a slang term for someone quite "odd."
SteveW
How could anyone come to 4 as half of nine?
American money is so complicated. In the UK we only have two denominations. Pounds and pence. A penny is 100th of a pound. Why don't you just say x dollars and y cents? What's all this dime shit? And pennies? You use cents don't you? What's a penny in the US?
You f*ck up weights of people too, instead of simply 10 stone, you say 140 pounds. Way too big a number.
Only Luddites still use cash. Are you a Luddite?
Yah, we both need to switch to the SI metric system.
Who are you trying to shit? You have 1p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 25p, and 50p coins. As I understand it the 25p coin is a nostalgic hangover of the shilling and as common as the US 50 cent piece. We stopped minting the
50 cent coin so while they are still legal tender they are so rare most people will keep them like a $2 bill.As for pet names for the denominations, don't even go there. I never could figure out tanners, bobs, florins, quid, guineas, and all the rest of the stuff in British novels.
How about 20 stone, like the last Eurovision winner? You can really pick them. Will the UK participate after Brexit? Every contest needs a reliable loser.
No, we have 1p 2p 5p 10p 20p 50p £1 and £2 coins today.
25p coins are no longer minted and were commemorative only. Also £5, £10, £20, £50 and £100 coins have been minted and are still legal tender..As I understand it the 25p coin is a nostalgic hangover of the
25p is five shillings or a 'crown' except that is also £5. 25p coins are no longer minted and were commemorative only. Also £5 coins.Well that's because you area thick yankee.
we had farthings, halfpennies, pennies, thruppeny bits, sixpence (tanner), shilling (bob), two shilling (florin) 2/6d (half crown) and
21 shillings (guinea) ten bob notes, and pound notes (a quid) when I were a boy.
I would be content dying never having heard another Eurovision song contest.
It should have died along with the other EBU funded propganda show 'Jeux sans frontières' where nations competed to see which could humiliate itself the most this reinforcing the belief that the EU is actually better than nationality.
Eurovision has nothing to do with the EU.
Colloquially also known as a dollar, a bit of slang from the old days before 1967 when £1 = $4
I've never even seen one never mind another.
Sadly only preipherally via the EBU. So it smees the dreary ghastlimness of it will not go with Brexit.
Cash is the only way for me to pay a person money. A shop, sure they have card readers. But do you carry one with you? If I came round your house to buy your car, would you take a credit card? Would either of us wish to pay the 3% fee charged by the bank?
Maybe, although it's difficult when you're used to one measurement. Imagine all the speed limit signs saying much higher numbers, I think we'd all think we were allowed to drive faster. Apparently Brits can occasionally use that as an excuse when caught speeding in France.
The UK is very slowly going metric. We normally now use C for temperature, and weights and measures for posting things, buying food and drink are all metric. But distances and speed on roads are stuck with miles.
Fortunately I'm in the same boat. I've seen photos of the Israeli who looks like she was beaten with an ugly stick but no sound clips. ABBA won once didn't it? That says it all.
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