Please explain the coins used in UK.

jjimm, did you mean that over there you can pull a few coins out of your pocket and actually buy something like a beer or sandwich, instead of having to break paper for virtually everything?

Yep, sure can :smiley:

I should have added that you don’t even need a few coins.

A £2 coin will get you a beer and £1 a sandwich…with change:)

A reuleaux heptagon? Same principle that the Wankel rotary engine uses.

Yeah, I just brought that up so I could say Wankel rotary engine.

Some beer-like liquid from Hyde’s, maybe

Precisely.

I think it’s a conspiracy by the manufacturers of pocket material.

A very small beer? And a very bad sandwich?

£2.09 will get you a pint of Bellhaven Best around here. Last year you could get pints from £1.56, although prices have risen considerably as of late.

Inflation, tell me about it. First pint I ever bought cost 45p.

Mind you, I was only 12.

When I was in Germany a pint cost 90 pfennigs, or only about $.40 American. This was in a student bar/disco attached to the student community I lived in, and it was a bit more expensive in town, but still.

U.S. quarters come to the banks in rolls of 40, it astonishes me that that many coins–our most valuable ones at that–aren’t enough to buy burgers, fries, and sodas for two.

I don’t care how scantily-clad my “Electricity” is, as long as it comes when I throw the switch. :smiley:

Canadian notes have a similar feature: differently-arranged patches of bumps. The notes are all the same size, but different colours. And only one, the $20, has the Queen on it (the back has cool Haida art).

Not at all.

My local sells Carling Black Label for £1.84 a pint
Bitter for £1.69 (cask) £1.59 (keg)
Mild for £1.59 (cask) £1.49 (keg)
Guinness is really expensive at £2.19.

Lots of Working Mens Clubs sell beers of all kinds at £1 per pint, Guinness excluded

The shop just across the road from the pub sells decent sarnies ranging from 0.99p for Egg Mayo to the really expensive stuff such as prawn for £1.59

The joy of returning home to a small town when living in the big (for Northern Ireland) city, two quid for a very nice pint. A tenner will break down into five coins each one worth a beer, it starts to feel like you’re trading in beer tokens all of a sudden :stuck_out_tongue:

I don’t find this actually to be true; variance in the size actually helps to keep them segregated; in those cases where I carry multiple pieces of paper money, I just stack them in ascending order of value and I can tell at a glance what denominations I have in my wallet - and it isn’t difficult at all to insert, say, a £10 note received as change into its proper place in the stack (given that there are only three denominations likely to be in there).

Even in London a Samuel Smiths pub will sell you a pint of Sovereign Best Bitter for about £1.80. Note the word '‘about’ - every friday we work our way through about five to seven pints each, and none of us know exactly how much it costs, other than it used to cost £1.74 when we first started going there. All that matters is, it’s cheap :smiley: and tasty :smiley: :smiley:

And even the not-very-cheap folks at Pret a Manger will sell you a tuna sandwich for £1.25, so £2 is actually a pretty useful amount.

chowder and slaphead, I stand corrected.

I’ll start collecting coins for my next trip over.

Drinking at 12? I blame gay marriage.

Gay marriage? I blame drinking at 12.

Starting at 12? I’ve usually had two or three pints by then, at least on the weekend.

Actually; the cause is pretty obvious; jjimm must have been exposed to breasts during his early childhood.