OFF: Snow, metric propaganda! :-)
M Holmes
fofp at HOLYROOD.ED.AC.UK
Wed Dec 3 07:35:42 EST 1997
Daniel Wikdahl writes:
> I'll never learn how much an inch is! 2.2 cm?
2.4cm
> And those strange "miles" then... you're writing 'bout how far it is
> from your town to the place where tBS or some other band will play...
> but I just don't get it... when I'm reading your figures it seems to
> me like the concert can take place anywhere 'tween another continent
> and your backyard! Come on! What's wrong with the metric system?!?
> Inch, yard, feet, pint, quarter pounder cheese etc - rubbish from the
> stone age! :-) :-) :-)
You're luck we decimalised money. It used to be 12 pennies in a
shilling. 5 shillings in a crown, and four crowns in a Pound.
Coins were in denominations of:
farthings: 1/4 penny
halfpennies
pennies
twopennies
threepennies
sixpennies
shillings
Florins: two shillings
half crowns: two and a half shillings
Crowns: five shillings
Ten bob notes: ten shillings
Pounds
Although certain payments were in Guineas rather than Pounds. A Guinea
was a Pound and a shilling.
This system was popularly known as "LSD" as L was the symbol for Pounds,
S for Shillings, and D for pennies.
The good part was of course that since there were 240 pennies in a
Pound, a Pound could be wholly fractioned in various ways that aren't
possible post decimalisation. We should really go back to the sensible
currency system we used to have.
> mvh - Daniel Wikdahl 185cm 83kg 1mm snow (it
FoFP
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