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 Local / United Kingdom / 2081
    Educate me! —Scott Arthur
   I've just heard the McD sets are available in the UK. 4 Qs 1. How many will there be? 2. How often will the shop change the set available? 3. Will the same set be available in each shop at the same time? 4. What is the healthiest meal I can eat in (...) (25 years ago, 1-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
   
        Re: Educate me! —Michael Edwards
     Correct me if i am wrong Q1 I think there is 8 i will have to check Q2 ? No idea, they should have all types there, thats what they did to the smufs? Q3 No idea Q4 A Milkshake and buy the sets at 49p each, the drink costs about £1 Michael -- Please (...) (25 years ago, 1-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
    
         Re: Educate me! —Rob Hendrix
     What in the world is a £ anyway? A pound? A sterling? What is the exchange rate (average) for a $? (25 years ago, 1-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
    
         Re: Educate me! —Michael Edwards
      £ is the sybmol for the UK pound The average £1 is about $1.6US Bear in mind that you are reading a UK group. Michael -- Please reply on medwards@ukonline.co.uk Home of the UK Technic Club Magazine Web site: (URL) to be updated, soon to be good 198 (...) (25 years ago, 1-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
    
         Re: Educate me! —Larry Pieniazek
     (...) It's the currency symbol used for the Great Britain Pound. I'm not 100% sure but I think the Irish Punt uses the same symbol. It is exactly analogous to $ being the currency symbol for US and Canadian and a bunch of other dollars. (...) The (...) (25 years ago, 1-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
    
         Re: Educate me! —Richard Dee
      On Wed, 1 Dec 1999 16:17:25 GMT, Larry Pieniazek uttered the following profundities... (...) Yes, 'tis the same symbol. Now, for the history, why a pound? The Roman soldiers that occupied our land were paid in salt, one pound of it. The "L"-like (...) (25 years ago, 1-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
     
          Re: Educate me! —Richard Franks
       (...) And to this day, Roman roads in Britain are still covered in salt. Richard (25 years ago, 1-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
     
          Re: Educate me! —Larry Pieniazek
      (...) Not just in the UK, that apparently was an empire wide thing, although I hadn't heard the bit about it being one pound's worth. Salt and Salary have the same latin root. Now you know why. However your explanation doesn't explain why it's a (...) (25 years ago, 1-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
     
          Re: Educate me! —Richard Dee
      On Wed, 1 Dec 1999 20:04:17 GMT, Larry Pieniazek uttered the following profundities... (...) Guessing time. Transition from the "salt" standard, to silver standard? (25 years ago, 2-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
     
          Re: Educate me! —Kev Holmes
      Pretty good guess. A quick search on www.eb.com then reveals... "the basic monetary unit of Great Britain, divided (since 1971) decimally into 100 new pence. The term is derived from the fact that, about 775, silver coins known as "sterlings" were (...) (25 years ago, 2-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
    
         Re: Educate me! —Kieran Brady
      (...) Somewhat similar - IR£ - preceded by'IR' (for Irish??). The Irish punt has a variable exchange rate against the £ sterling, at the moment approx 80% of sterling. I am Irish BTW, and I generally hang about on .loc.uk - nearest thing to me that (...) (25 years ago, 2-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
   
        Re: Educate me! —Naji Norder
    From my experience in the US.. (...) We had eight - I think you have the same sets as we did. (...) One of the McDs near me said that they got a new shipment each week. However, I also went in on a Wednesday (and bought the purple set) and was told (...) (25 years ago, 2-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
   
        Re: Educate me! —Larry Pieniazek
   (...) Technically, 9. One was the DUPLO set. (25 years ago, 2-Dec-99, to lugnet.loc.uk)
 

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