Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-31 Thread Mark Janssen
On Fri, 2003-01-31 at 09:59, Jean-Marc Chaton wrote: > * Pigeon [Wed, 29/01/2003 at 18:22 +] > > > > British phones had a # key on the keypad for several years before the [snip] > > symbol. They mostly call it "hash" now. > In France, we call it the "sharp" key (dièse in French), coz the sign

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-31 Thread Jean-Marc Chaton
* Pigeon [Wed, 29/01/2003 at 18:22 +] > > British phones had a # key on the keypad for several years before the > exchanges were upgraded to the point where you could actually do > anything with it. When this happened, the recorded help/instruction > messages were at something of a loss as to

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-30 Thread Ron Johnson
On Thu, 2003-01-30 at 10:56, Nathan E Norman wrote: > On Thu, Jan 30, 2003 at 10:08:29AM -0500, Jaldhar H. Vyas wrote: > > A pound sterling is so-called because it was originally the value of a > > pound of "sterling" silver. sterling comes from Easterling which is what > > German Hanseatic mercha

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-30 Thread Pigeon
On Thu, Jan 30, 2003 at 10:56:26AM -0600, Nathan E Norman wrote: > On Thu, Jan 30, 2003 at 10:08:29AM -0500, Jaldhar H. Vyas wrote: > > A pound sterling is so-called because it was originally the value of a > > pound of "sterling" silver. sterling comes from Easterling which is what > > German Han

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-30 Thread Nathan E Norman
On Thu, Jan 30, 2003 at 10:08:29AM -0500, Jaldhar H. Vyas wrote: > A pound sterling is so-called because it was originally the value of a > pound of "sterling" silver. sterling comes from Easterling which is what > German Hanseatic merchants were called during the middle ages. I need to read less

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-30 Thread Pigeon
On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 04:16:43PM -0500, David P James wrote: > Pigeon was roused into action on 2003-01-29 13:38 and wrote: > > > >How the British came to pronounce "lieutenant" "leftenant", I still > >don't know. The American pronunciation "lootenant" is surely much > >closer to the original - F

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-30 Thread Jaldhar H. Vyas
On Tue, 28 Jan 2003, Pigeon wrote: > OK, Just to make things more complicated British money changed around > 1970 from 1 pound = 240 pennies from 1 pound = 100 new pennies, ie. > the value of the pound stayed the same but the penny changed. The > 1/240-pound sort of pennies are now called "old pen

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-29 Thread Pigeon
On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 04:48:04PM -0600, Nathan E Norman wrote: > On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 04:13:56PM +, Pigeon wrote: > > I tend to use terms like "quid" or "pound" because I still expect > > pound (?) signs to be turned into hash (#) signs by non-British > > equipment. To make matters worse,

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-29 Thread Pigeon
On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 10:00:20PM -0500, Stephen Gran wrote: > This one time, at band camp, Charlie Reiman said: > > "#" has several names but most will be lost on non-techies. I'm not even > > sure why we call it the pound symbol since we Americans usually abbreviate > > pounds (the unit of weigh

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-29 Thread bob parker
On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 22:32, Colin Watson wrote: > On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 03:31:58AM -0600, will trillich wrote: > > On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 04:13:56PM +, Pigeon wrote: > > > 1 pound = 240 (old) pennies > > > 1 pound = 100 new pennies > > > Quid = pound (slang) > > > Pence = alternative form of

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-29 Thread Colin Watson
On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 03:31:58AM -0600, will trillich wrote: > On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 04:13:56PM +, Pigeon wrote: > > 1 pound = 240 (old) pennies > > 1 pound = 100 new pennies > > Quid = pound (slang) > > Pence = alternative form of Pennies > > Shilling = 12 old pennies = 5 new pennies > > H

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-29 Thread will trillich
On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 04:13:56PM +, Pigeon wrote: > On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 07:50:12PM -0600, will trillich wrote: > > OT: so where's the lexicon that relates quid, guinea, bob, > > shilling, pence, pound and so forth, for the ignorant > > north-americaner? :) > 1 pound = 240 (old) pennies >

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Clive Standbridge
On Tue 28 Jan 2003 16:13:56 +(+), Pigeon wrote: > On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 07:50:12PM -0600, will trillich wrote: > > OT: so where's the lexicon that relates quid, guinea, bob, > > shilling, pence, pound and so forth, for the ignorant > > north-americaner? :) > > OK, Just to make things mor

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Clive Standbridge
On Tue 28 Jan 2003 16:48:04 +(-0600), Nathan E Norman wrote: > > How the hell do I type a euro character? :-) You'd need iso-8859-15 encoding (locale en_US@euro perhaps?). Euro is 0xA4 which is ¤ (looks like a twinkly star) in iso-8859-1. Hopefully there's a suitable compose sequence if you

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Stephen Gran
This one time, at band camp, Charlie Reiman said: > "#" has several names but most will be lost on non-techies. I'm not even > sure why we call it the pound symbol since we Americans usually abbreviate > pounds (the unit of weight) with the equally cryptic "lbs." Comes from the latin libra, which

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Seneca
On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 04:48:04PM -0600, Nathan E Norman wrote: > The '#' has a crapload of names: some I know are [...] > 4) "octothorpe"; I guess this is the typographical name or something. > I even used to know _why_, but I'm too lazy to look it up. In a book I have, it gives '#' a meaning o

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Kent West
Charlie Reiman wrote: "#" has several names . I like hash because then the omnipresent "#!" becomes the hash-bang, or shebang for short. I've heard "#!" referred to as splat-bang; I kind of like that. Kent -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Steve Juranich
On 28 January 2003 at 16:13, Pigeon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > misleading answer. Puzzles me a bit - I thought # was an American > symbol anyway - does it just have two American names, one of which is > better at crossing oceans? (Because "pound" is heavy, and sinks?) I think the official name

RE: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Charlie Reiman
> -Original Message- > From: Pigeon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 8:14 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?] > > I tend to use terms like "quid" or "pound" because I st

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Jeffrey L. Taylor
Quoting Pigeon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > I tend to use terms like "quid" or "pound" because I still expect > pound (£) signs to be turned into hash (#) signs by non-British > equipment. To make matters worse, Americans sometimes call hash signs > pound signs, so asking "did my pound signs come out OK"

Re: Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Nathan E Norman
On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 04:13:56PM +, Pigeon wrote: > I tend to use terms like "quid" or "pound" because I still expect > pound (£) signs to be turned into hash (#) signs by non-British > equipment. To make matters worse, Americans sometimes call hash signs > pound signs, so asking "did my poun

Slang for money [was: Re: Backup Consensus?]

2003-01-28 Thread Pigeon
On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 07:50:12PM -0600, will trillich wrote: > OT: so where's the lexicon that relates quid, guinea, bob, > shilling, pence, pound and so forth, for the ignorant > north-americaner? :) OK, Just to make things more complicated British money changed around 1970 from 1 pound = 240 p