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Writing conventions
£2.3s.6d. (two pounds, three shillings and six pence) 1/- (one shilling) (a bob) 11d. (elevenpence)
2/6 (two shillings and six pence, usually pronounced as "two-and-six" or "half a crown") 2/- (two shillings, or one florin) (two bob) 4s.3d. ("four-and-threepence") 5s. (five shillings) (one crown) (five bob) 14-8-2 (fourteen pounds, eight shillings and tuppence – in columns of figures) £1.10s.- (one pound, ten shillings) (thirty bob) Halfpennies and farthings (quarter of a penny) were represented by the appropriate symbol after the whole pence. A convention frequently used in retail pricing was to list prices over one pound all in shillings, rather than in pounds and shillings; for example, £4-18-0 would be written as 98/- (£4.90 in decimal currency). Sometimes prices of luxury goods and furniture were expressed by merchants in whole numbers of guineas, even though the guinea coin had not been in use for over 150 years. A guinea was twenty-one shillings (£1.05 in decimal currency). In popular cultureLysergic acid diethylamide was sometimes called “pounds, shillings and pence” during the 1960s, because of the abbreviation LSD.[1] See also
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