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A sampler in the Guildhall Museum of Rochester illustrates the conversion between pence and shillings and shillings and pounds.
Old till in Ireland, with "shortcut" keys in various £sd denominations (lower numbers) and their "new pence" equivalent (upper numbers)
Toy coin, which teaches children the value of a shilling

£sd (occasionally written Lsd), spoken as "pounds, shillings and pence", is the popular name for the pre-decimal currencies once common throughout Europe. The abbreviation originates from the Latin currency denominations librae, solidi, and denarii.[1] In the United Kingdom, these were referred to as pounds, shillings, and pence (pence being the plural of penny).

Under this system, there were 12 pence in a shilling and 20 shillings, or 240 pence, in a pound. Although the standard ledger accounting system recorded only pounds, shillings and pence, actual minted coins could represent one, several or fractions of these units. The penny was subdivided into 4 farthings until 31 December 1960, when they ceased to be legal tender in the UK, and until 31 July 1969 there was also a halfpenny ("HAYp'ny", /ˈheɪpni/) in circulation. The perceived advantage of such a system was its use in some aspects of mental arithmetic, as it afforded many factors and hence fractions of a pound such as tenths, eighths, sixths and even sevenths and ninths if the guinea (worth 21 shillings) was used. When dealing with items in dozens, multiplication and division are straightforward; for example, if a dozen eggs cost four shillings, then each egg was priced at fourpence. Basic addition, however, could be more difficult than using a decimal system.

Although the names originated from popular coins in the classical Roman Empire, their definitions and the ratios between them were introduced and imposed across Western Europe by the Emperor Charlemagne. King Offa of Mercia adopted the Frankish silver standard of librae, solidi and denarii into Britain in the late 8th century.[2]

The £sd system was the standard across much of the European continent for over a thousand years, until the decimalisations of the 18th and 19th centuries. The United Kingdom remained one of the few countries retaining it into the 20th century, resulting in the system becoming particularly associated with Britain. For much of the 20th century, £sd remained the monetary system of most of the British Commonwealth, the major exceptions being Canada and India, until the 1960s and 1970s, with Nigeria being the last to abandon it in the form of the Nigerian pound on 1 January 1973.

Historically, similar systems based on Roman coinage were used elsewhere; e.g., the division of the livre tournois in France and other pre-decimal currencies such as Spain, which had 20 maravedís to 1 real and 20 reales to 1 duro or 5 pesetas.[3]

Origins

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The classical Roman Empire originally used a decimal currency system based on the "as" whereby 1 denarius = 10 as. The silver denarius was the common circulation coin, but accounting was in sestercii. Later Roman Emperors undertook multiple coinage reforms, redefining weights and coins' relative values and introducing new coins and new accounting systems for them. Since most reforms were not even completed before the next one began, the late Roman Empire had a veritable mess of multiple overlapping systems of weights and currencies.

Carolingian denarius

Around the 780s, the Frankish emperor Charlemagne cut through the mess by creating a new uniform system. He defined the "libra" as a new measure of weight equivalent to around 408 grams[4][a] (substantially larger than the old Roman pound of 328.9g), and ordered 240 silver units known as denarii to be struck from the new Carolingian pound of pure silver, each denarius containing 22.5 grains of silver. To help accounting, Charlemagne also decreed that the pound was divisible into 20 solidi each of 12 denarii. Thus began the Carolingian monetary system (1l. = 20s. = 240d.).

The new coinage and accounting system was imposed uniformly across the vast Carolingian Empire and also infiltrated countries on its periphery. In the late 8th century, King Offa of Mercia imported the system into Britain to facilitate transactions (notably "Peter's pence") with the Roman Catholic Church (which used the Carolingian coinage system). But it was not the sole system in Britain – the £sd system would have to compete for a while with the Viking "mark" accounting system, introduced into Danelaw regions. Although £sd ultimately prevailed in Britain, the "mark of account" system lingered on in North Sea trade and areas of Hanseatic influence through much of the Middle Ages.

Charlemagne's new monetary system prevailed across much of Western Europe including France (where the units were known as the livre, sous and denier), Italy (lira, soldo and denaro), the Holy Roman Empire (pfund, schilling and pfennig) and in England (pound, shilling and penny). The English name pound is a Germanic adaptation of the Latin phrase libra pondo 'a pound weight'.[6] On the Iberian peninsula, the Kingdom of Aragon adopted the Carolingian monetary system (Catalan: lliura, sou and diners), but those of Portugal and Castile (and subsequently Spain) retained the currency system inherited from al-Andalus.

During the early Middle Ages, only the denarius was issued as an actual coin; the libra and solidus were merely units of account. But over time, the silver resources were gradually exhausted and the coins became repeatedly debased by mediaeval monarchs, prompting the minting of larger coins from the 13th century. It also led to specification of currencies by mint of origin in contracts and accounting (e.g. a denier parisis, of the Paris mint, contained more actual silver than the very debased denier tournois of the Tours mint).

To facilitate larger transactions, gold coins began to be minted in western Europe around the same time. The French "franc", introduced in 1360, was the first coin anywhere to represent exactly £1 and the gold "sovereign", first minted in 1489, was the first English £1 coin.

Although the £sd system remained intact in ledger accounting, the variety of new coins of various multiples and qualities led to common expression of quantities in terms of number of coins (guineas, crowns, farthings, etc.) But they would all have to be converted into formal £sd units in accounts.

Decimalisation

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Conversion of some British pre-decimalisation currencies, and the decimal equivalent

The £sd system continued in much of Western Europe for nearly a thousand years, until the "decimalisations" of the 18th and 19th centuries. Britain considered following the continental example. A parliamentary select committee was set up in 1821 to inquire into decimalisation, but ended up recommending retaining the £sd system. However, pressure groups were formed inside Britain advocating the adoption of decimalisation of the currency, and Parliament returned to the matter in the 1850s. Various decimalisation schemes were considered – the Pound-and-Mil scheme, the Farthing scheme, the Half-penny scheme, the Alb scheme, etc. – but all were determined to have deficiencies, and transition would be too difficult and expensive. The £sd system was maintained in Britain until 1971.

As countries of the British Empire became independent, some abandoned the £sd system quickly, while others retained it almost as long as the UK itself. The United States of America was among the first to drop the £sd system and adopt a decimal currency in 1792, 10 years after independence from the British Empire, but retains many other aspects of the customary units for length and weight. Australia, on the other hand, only changed to using a decimal currency on 14 February 1966, 65 years after independence. New Zealand followed suit on 10 July 1967. Still others, notably Ireland, decimalised only when the UK did. The UK abandoned the old penny on Decimal Day, 15 February 1971, when one pound sterling became divided into 100 new pence. This was a change from the system used in the earlier wave of decimalisations in Australia, New Zealand, Rhodesia and South Africa, in which the pound was replaced with a new major currency called either the "dollar" or the "rand". The British shilling was replaced by a 5 new pence coin worth one-twentieth of a pound. In Europe, decimalisation of currency (as well as other weights and measures) began in Revolutionary France with the law of 1795 ("Loi du 18 germinal an III", 7 April 1795), replacing the £sd accounting system of the Ancien régime with a system of 1 franc = 10 decimes = 100 centimes. Decimalisation was carried by French armies to neighboring European countries during the Napoleonic wars. By the mid-19th century, most of continental Europe had decimalised, leaving the United Kingdom as the only major country to continue to maintain the £sd system.

All countries and territories that formerly used the £sd system have now decimalised their currency, with most decimalisations occurring after the Second World War. Malta decimalised its currency in 1972, while Nigeria decimalised in 1973. The British pound sterling and Irish pound were among the last to be decimalised, on 15 February 1971.

In places where £sd was used, there were several approaches to decimalisation:

  • The pound remained the base unit (in Malta, using the Maltese name "lira"), but was subdivided into new fractional units of 1100 of a pound. The new fractional unit (called the "new penny" in the UK and Ireland and the "cent" in Malta) was worth 2.4 old pence. Malta also created a fractional unit worth 11000 of a pound, called the "mil", worth slightly less than a farthing (0.24 old pence).
  • A new base unit (often called the "dollar") was created equal to ten shillings (half a pound), and subdivided into 100 fractional units, with one fractional unit (usually called the "cent") equal to 110 of a shilling or 1.2 old pence. This was the approach adopted in South Africa (as the Rand), Australia, New Zealand, Jamaica, Fiji and many other countries.
  • A new base unit called the "dollar" was created at parity with the United States dollar. This was done in Canada in 1858 and in many places in the West Indies in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In Bermuda in 1970, as the pound was fixed at US$2.40 i.e. US$1 = 100d., this made the new Bermudian dollar equal to exactly 100 old pence, with the new cent equal to one old penny.
  • Some countries have adopted alternative approaches, such as Ghana, which created a new base unit equal to 100 old pence (not equal to the U.S. dollar), with a fractional unit equal to one old penny, Bahamas, which adopted a new base unit equal to seven shillings, with a fractional unit equal to 0.84 old pence, and The Gambia, which created a new base unit equal to four shillings, with a fractional unit equal to 0.48 old pence.
New unit New unit / old unit New unit in £sd Old unit Year
South Africa South African rand 0.5 10/– South African pound 1961
Sierra Leone Sierra Leonean leone 0.5 10/– British West African pound 1964
Ghana Ghanaian cedi 0.4167 8/4 = 100d. Ghanaian pound 1965
Australia Australian dollar 0.5 10/– Australian pound 1966
The Bahamas Bahamian dollar 0.35 7/– Bahamian pound 1966
New Zealand New Zealand dollar 0.5 10/– New Zealand pound 1967
Samoa Western Samoan tala 0.5 10/– Western Samoan pound 1967
Tonga Tongan paʻanga 0.5 10/– Tongan pound 1967
Zambia Zambian kwacha 0.5 10/– Zambian pound 1968
Jamaica Jamaican dollar 0.5 10/– Jamaican pound 1969
Fiji Fijian dollar 0.5 10/– Fijian pound 1969
Rhodesia Rhodesian dollar 0.5 10/– Rhodesian pound 1970
Bermuda Bermudian dollar 0.4167 8/4 = 100d. Bermudian pound 1970
The Gambia Gambian dalasi 0.2 4/– Gambian pound 1971
Malawi Malawian kwacha 0.5 10/– Malawian pound 1971
Republic of Ireland Irish pound 1 £1 Irish pound 1971
United Kingdom Pound stg. 1 £1 Pound stg. 1971
Malta Maltese lira 1 £M 1 Maltese pound 1972
Nigeria Nigerian naira 0.5 10/– Nigerian pound 1973
This table is not exhaustive.

The following table shows the conversion of common denominations of coins of the £sd systems.

Coin Amount New £p
(e.g. UK)
New $c
(e.g. NZ)
Halfpenny 12d. 524p ≈ 0.2083p 512c ≈ 0.4167c
Penny 1d. 512p ≈ 0.4167p 56c ≈ 0.8333c
Threepence 3d. 1+14p 2+12c
Sixpence 6d. 2+12p 5c
Shilling 1/– 5p 10c
Florin 2/– 10p 20c
Half crown 2/6 12+12p 25c

The following coins were not in common circulation in the UK at the time of decimalisation, though the ten shilling note and the pound note were.

Common name Amount New £p
(e.g. UK)
New $c
(e.g. NZ)
Crown 5/– 25p 50c
Half sovereign 10/– 50p $1
Sovereign £1 £1 $2

The farthing, at 14 penny, was never converted, as it ceased to be legal tender a decade prior to decimalisation. In 1971, a new penny would have been worth 9.6 farthings (making a farthing slightly more than 0.1 new pence). Similarly, the old halfpenny and the half-crown were not converted[clarification needed] in the UK either,[citation needed] having been withdrawn in the run-up to decimalisation, although the half-crown was worth exactly 12 1/2 new pence.

Pre-decimal coins and banknotes

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In the UK, larger denomination notes (£5, £10, £20, £50, £100, £200, £500, and £1,000) printed from the 18th century to 1943 were called "white notes" because they were printed on lightweight white paper (on one side only) in black ink.[7]

United Kingdom pre-decimal banknotes are no longer legal tender, but are exchangeable for their face value (regardless of the possible greater worth if sold or auctioned) if they are taken directly (or posted) to the Bank of England.[8] The last £sd coins to cease being legal tender in the UK after Decimal Day were the sixpence (withdrawn 1980), the shilling (withdrawn 1991) and the florin (withdrawn 1993). Commemorative crowns minted post decimalisation (worth either 25p or £5) are still legal tender, but are rarely, if ever, spent.

The last £sd banknote to cease to be legal tender anywhere was the Isle of Man ten shilling note, which ceased to be legal tender there in 2013.[9]

Computing

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1401 Console and, below, the Auxiliary Console. The grey knob nearest the centre of the Auxiliary Console mentions "PENCE" and "SHILL".

Computers and calculators sold pre-decimalisation – mostly in the 1960s – occasionally came with special support for the £sd system in the form of a fixed-point currency datatype. The IBM 1401 is one such machine; on Sterling models with £sd support, it had a switch for selecting between IBM and BSI data layouts of £sd on its auxiliary console (see image). The ICT 1301 and the PL/I language[10] also had £sd support.

Writing conventions and pronunciations

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Notice board displaying the entry prices for the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, c. 1946

There were several ways to represent amounts of money in writing and speech, with no formal convention; for example:

  • 3 l. 17 s. 10 ½ d. (three pounds, seventeen shillings, and ten-and-a-half pence)[11]: 62 
  • £2/3/6 (two pounds, three shillings and sixpence), spoken, unless there was cause to be punctilious, "two pound(s), three and six". Whether "pound" or "pounds" was used depended upon the speaker, varying with class, region and context.
  • 1/– (one shilling), colloquially "a bob"; the slash sign derives from the older style of a long s for "solidus", which is also one name for the sign itself; the '–' is used in place of '0', meaning "zero pence".[12][13]
  • 11d. (elevenpence)
  • 1+12d (a penny halfpenny, three halfpence). As spoken, the lf in halfpenny and halfpence was always silent; they were pronounced "hayp'ny" /ˈhpni/[14] and "haypence" /ˈhpəns/[14][15] – hence the occasional spellings ha'penny and ha'pence).
  • 3d (three pence), with reference to the above, this became thruppence, commonly referred to as a "threepenny bit".
  • 6d (six pence) known as a "tanner" or half a shilling.
  • 2/– (two shillings, or one florin, colloquially "two-bob bit" or just "two bob")
  • 2/6 (two shillings and six pence, usually said as "two and six" or a "half-crown"; the value could also be spoken as "half a crown", but the coin was always a half-crown)
  • 4/3 ("four and threepence", the latter word pronounced "thruppence" /ˈθrʌpəns/, "threppence" /ˈθrɛpəns/, "throopence" with -oo- as in "foot" /ˈθrʊpəns/, or "four-and-three")
  • 5/– (five shillings, one crown, "five bob", a dollar)[16][17]
  • £1/1/- one guinea - historically an amount paid for settlement of legal disputes, but currently still the wager on the winner of a horse race.
  • £1/10/– (one pound, ten shillings; one pound ten, "thirty bob")
  • £1/19/11+34 (one pound, nineteen shillings and elevenpence three farthings: a psychological price, one farthing under £2)
  • £14/8/2 (fourteen pounds, eight shillings and twopence – pronounced "tuppence" /ˈtʌpəns/ – in columns of figures. Commonly read "fourteen pound(s) eight and two")

Halfpennies and farthings (quarter of a penny) were represented by the appropriate symbol (14 for farthing, 12 for halfpenny, or 34 for three farthings) 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). This is still seen in shilling categories of Scottish beer, such as 90/– beer.

Sometimes, prices of luxury goods and furniture were expressed by merchants in guineas, although the guinea coin had not been struck since 1799. A guinea was 21 shillings (£1.05 in decimal currency). Professionals such as lawyers[18] and physicians, art dealers, and some others stated their fees in guineas rather than pounds, while, for example, salaries were stated in pounds per annum.[19] Historically, at some auctions, the purchaser would bid and pay in guineas but the seller would receive the same number of pounds; the commission was the same number of shillings. Tattersalls, the main auctioneer of racehorses in the United Kingdom and Ireland, continues this tradition of conducting auctions in guineas at its UK sales (in Ireland, auctions are conducted in euros). The vendor's commission is 5%.[20][21] The word "guineas" is still found in the names of some British horse races, even though their prize funds are now fixed in pounds – such as the 1,000 Guineas and 2,000 Guineas at Newmarket Racecourse.

Colloquial terms

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Coin Pronounced Slang (UK) Slang (other) Notes
Farthing and ha'penny bit (value: quarter penny and half a penny) ˈfɑːðɪŋ, /ˈheɪpni/ "Mag" (slang for "chattering") UK: Originally made from copper and made a ringing noise when dropped. The game of "penny pitching" (bouncing pennies against a wall to see how far they would rebound on to the pavement) was called "mag flying".
Threepenny bit (value: three pence) Thrupney bit or threpney bit Joey (also see Fourpence) Australia: trey (also spelt tray), or a trey bit, from the French "trois" meaning three.[22]

South Africa[23] and Southern Rhodesia: tickey.[24]

UK: When the new threepence coin replaced the fourpence coin in circulation in 1845, it took over its nickname. The coin was silver or silver alloy from 1845 to 1937 and a 12-sided bronze coin from 1937 to 1971.
Fourpenny bit (value: four pence) ˈfɔːp(ə)ni Joey UK: Also known as "groat", from the mediaeval four-penny silver coin of the same name. "Joey" was from the first name of Joseph Hume, the Radical Member of Parliament who championed its reintroduction.
Sixpenny bit (value: six pence) ˈsɪksp(ə)ns Tanner, tester, testoon, sprasi (pronounced "sprarzee")[25] Australia: zack UK: "Tanner" was derived from the Romany word tano, meaning "small", because it was smaller than a shilling. Tester and testoon derived from the French coin teston. Sprasi, described by Bernard Levin, is unknown.
Shilling ˈʃɪlɪŋ Bob or "thin 'un" Australia: bob, deener UK: "Thin 'un" because it was thinner than a sovereign coin.[26]

Australia: "deener" is likely to have derived from the Latin "dinar" or "denarius".

Two-shilling piece, florin Two bob, two-shilling bit, two-bob bit Australia: two bob UK: Perhaps an early attempt at decimalisation, being £+110).
Half a crown or half crown (value: two shillings and sixpence) An equivalent coin was not issued in the 1971 decimal currency range since there was no need for a 12+12 New Pence coin.
Crown or five-shilling piece (value: five shillings) Dollar[16][17]
Ten-shilling note Ten bob (note), half a bar Australia: ten bob UK: First printed in 1914 by the Treasury during World War I to conserve silver. These early Treasury notes (especially the 1st and 2nd Series from 1914 to 1917) were nicknamed "Bradburys", from the prominent stylised signature of Sir John Bradbury, Permanent Secretary to the Treasury.[27]
Pound Both coins and notes: quid, nicker. Coins: "sov", "thick 'un". Notes: bar, sheet, note. Australia: quid, fiddly-did "Quid" may have originated in the Latin phrase quid pro quo.

UK: "Thick 'un" because it was thicker than a shilling. Australia: Fiddly-did was derived from word association (fiddly fid quid).[22]

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The currency of knuts, sickles and galleons in the Harry Potter books is a parody of the £sd system, with 29 knuts to a sickle and 17 sickles to a galleon. It serves as the currency of the Wizarding World, while pounds are still used by Muggles, the non-magical people.[28][29]

Lysergic acid diethylamide was sometimes called "pounds, shillings and pence" during the 1960s, because of the abbreviation LSD.[30] The English rock group the Pretty Things released a 1966 single titled "£.s.d." that highlighted the double entendre.[31] The Chemical Defence Experimental Establishment called the first field trial with LSD as a chemical weapon "Moneybags" as a pun.[32]

The score of 26 at darts (one dart in each of the top three spaces) was sometimes called "half-a-crown" as late as the 1990s, though this did start to confuse the younger players. 26 is also referred to as "Breakfast", since 2/6 or half a crown was the standard cost for breakfast pre-decimalisation.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ There is uncertainty about the value of the original Carolingian pound. Estimates as high as 489.6 grams can be seen.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Sutherland, Carol Humphrey Vivian (6 December 1973). English Coinage, 600-1900. B. T. Batsford. p. 10. ISBN 0-7134-0731-X.
  2. ^ Hodgkin, Thomas (1906). The history of England ... to the Norman conquest. London, New York and Bombay: Longmans, Green, and Co. p. 234. ISBN 9780722222454. Archived from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  3. ^ Walkingame, Francis (1874). The Tutor's Assistant. p. 96.
  4. ^ Naismith, Rory, ed. (2018). Money and Coinage in the Middle Ages (PDF). Brill Publishers. p. 81. ISBN 978-90-04-38309-8.
  5. ^ Munro, John. "Money and Coinage in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe". University of Toronto. Retrieved 20 September 2024.
  6. ^ "pound". Oxford English Dictionary.
  7. ^ Bank of England (2019). "Withdrawn banknotes". Archived from the original on 15 January 2019. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  8. ^ Bank of England. "Exchanging withdrawn Bank of England banknotes". Archived from the original on 15 April 2017. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  9. ^ "Withdrawal of Manx Plastic £1 note". Isle of Man Government. Archived from the original on 2 July 2018. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  10. ^ @ianpolpo (17 September 2021). "PL/I supported it" (Tweet). Archived from the original on 17 September 2021 – via Twitter.
  11. ^ Smith, Adam (1786) [1776]. An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Vol. 1 (4 ed.).
  12. ^ "solidus: definition of solidus in Oxford dictionary (British & World English)". Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 10 June 2014. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
  13. ^ Fowler, Francis George (1917). The concise Oxford dictionary of current English. p. 829. Archived from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  14. ^ a b "Definition of halfpenny". Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 21 July 2012.
  15. ^ Schwarz, C. M. (1993). "half". The Chambers Dictionary. p. 755. ISBN 0550102558.
  16. ^ a b Partridge, Eric (2 September 2003). The Routledge Dictionary of Historical Slang. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-79542-9. Archived from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  17. ^ a b "DiCamillo British Money Guide including Amazing Historical Facts". DiCamillo. Archived from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  18. ^ John Palmer (1823). The Attorney and Agents new Table of Costs in the Courts of Kings Bench and Common Pleas, Fifth edition enlarged: to which is added a table of all the stamp duties. p. 461. Archived from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  19. ^ Christine Evans-Pughe (12 December 2011). "Faraday – a man of contradictions". Engineering and Technology. Archived from the original on 3 September 2018. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  20. ^ "Tattersalls February Sale 2019 Catalogue" (PDF). Conditions of Sale, Paragraph 3.2. Tattersalls Limited. p. 14. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 May 2019. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  21. ^ "Guide to Sales (2018 Edition)" (PDF). Tattersalls Limited. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 December 2018. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  22. ^ a b "Slang Terms for Money". The Australian Coin Collecting Blog. Archived from the original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  23. ^ "Hear the Tickey Bottle Tinkle". The Rotarian. June 1954. Archived from the original on 19 December 2022.
  24. ^ Southern Rhodesia, Past and Present. Chronicle Stationery and Book Store. 1945. Archived from the original on 19 December 2022.
  25. ^ Levin, Bernard (1990). Now Read On. Jonathan Cape. p. 244. ISBN 0-224-03008-6.
  26. ^ "How Quids, Bobs, Florins, Tanners and Joeys Got Their Names". Archived from the original on 6 January 2023. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  27. ^ "£1 1st Series Treasury Issue". Bank of England. 2024. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  28. ^ "Wizard Currency". The Harry Potter Lexicon. 24 February 2018. Archived from the original on 27 July 2020. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  29. ^ Harry Potter Collectibles. 7 March 2000. ISBN 9781585980734. Archived from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 21 October 2020 – via Google Books.
  30. ^ Dickson, Paul (1998). Slang: The Authoritative Topic-By-Topic Dictionary of American Lingoes from All Walks of Life. Pocket Books. p. 134. ISBN 0-671-54920-0.
  31. ^ "Discography". The Pretty Things. 28 May 2008. Archived from the original on 28 May 2008. Retrieved 8 December 2023.
  32. ^ Andy Roberts (30 September 2008). Albion Dreaming: A popular history of LSD in Britain (Revised Edition with a new foreword by Dr. Sue Blackmore). Marshall Cavendish International Asia Pte Ltd. p. 52. ISBN 978-981-4328-97-5.
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