Pints in the UK can be served in oversized glasses (showing pint markings) or 
with 'brim' amounts.  You can go back to ask for it to be topped up if you 
think that the pint is not a legal pint.
In reality the bar server tends to pour beer into a glass so it overruns the 
side - giving you the full pint.  I've never seen a pint as small as 500ml.  
Ever.
'Heady' drinks are poured in a specific way  - eg Guinness.  There's a 'knack'. 
 Esp in the case of guinness the white head forms part of the 'experience'.  
Sometimes a shamrock is 'drawn' into the head.  In some areas of Northern 
Ireland this is seen as 'politically incorrect' ;-) .
Drinks like cider and lager tend to be headless and don't have the same issue.  
I would suspect cider and lager are the most asked pint style drinks.
Some pubs are now doing 'third' pint drinks now.  My favourite one is.

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:44162] Downsizing beer glasses
Date: Sun, 29 Mar 2009 07:16:44 +1100

On 2009/03/29, at 2:45 AM, Jeremiah MacGregor wrote:I'm sure Pat can tell us 
that the pint is still spoken in pubs in Australia, but no one would use it to 
mean a specific amount and thus the term has become generic.
 Dear Jerry,
Sadly, it is true that the word, pint, is still used in Australian hotels. And 
it is still used, as it is in the UK, to hide a long period of downsizing by 
the beer companies in collusion with government consumer affairs officials.
Let me explain what I mean.
Years ago when a pint was served in an Australia or UK hotel or pub, the beer 
was served in a 22 ounce container to allow for a pint of beer and for a 
suitable 'head' of froth. Likewise a half pint of beer was served in an 11 
ounce container to allow for the 10 ounce half pint and the appropriate head.
Some time ago, in the order of 50 years I suspect, lobbyists from the beer 
companies were able to convince legislators (or was it regulation writers) that 
a pint of beer could be served in a pint container that held a pint of water 
when filled to the brim of the glass. The law makers suitably rolled over like 
little puppies to get their tummies tickled and, in both Australia and the UK, 
if you asked for 'a pint of beer' in the last 50 years you would have received 
very close to 500 millilitres of beer with about 70 millilitres of 'head'. I 
leave to others to calculate this roughly 10 % gain in profits by the beer 
companies deceit over this period of time.
The next part of the campaign, as I observe it in the 21st century, is to 
downsize the beer glass from a pint (568 mL) to a rounded 500 mL glass. 
Naturally to do this the beer companies will need to reduce the size of the 
'beer pint' even further. The Guinness company has already begun this process 
with their 440 mL can designed with enough beer to fit into a glass that holds 
500 mL of air to the brim of the glass before you pour in the 440 mL of beer 
and the 60 mL of froth. I have noticed that this campaign has, so far, been 
tried in Australia and in Singapore.
To answer Jerry's question a little more directly, it seems to me that the use 
of the word 'pint', and its continued encouragement and support by beer 
companies, is to maintain the illusion that drinkers are getting more beer that 
they actually receive.
As a side issue, the word 'pint' is a relative to the word 'paint' from the 
time that Roman soldiers demanded that a paint mark be used on the side of 
(opaque ?) beer containers so that drinkers could check that the level of 
liquid beer was 'up to the paint'. Paint was gradually changed over the last 
2000 years to the word, 'pint'. But you will note that the rapaciousness of 
beer makers and sellers is not a new thing!
Cheers, Pat NaughtinPO Box 305 Belmont 3216,Geelong, AustraliaPhone: 61 3 5241 
2008Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has helped 
thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the modern metric 
system smoothly, quickly, and so economically that they now save thousands each 
year when buying, processing, or selling for their businesses. Pat provides 
services and resources for many different trades, crafts, and professions for 
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in the USA. Pat's clients include the Australian Government, Google, NASA, 
NIST, and the metric associations of Canada, the UK, and the USA. See 
http://www.metricationmatters.com for more metrication information, contact Pat 
at [email protected] or to get the free 'Metrication matters' 
newsletter go to: http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter to subscribe. 

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