Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!husc6!rice!uw-beaver!uw-june!uw-entropy!dataio!bright From: bright@Data-IO.COM (Walter Bright) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: Pound sign (was Re: the Telephone Test) Message-ID: <1977@dataio.Data-IO.COM> Date: 10 May 89 18:23:04 GMT References: <147@ixi.UUCP> <1334@nusdhub.UUCP> <8905081532.AA02862@beaches.hub.toronto.edu> Reply-To: bright@dataio.Data-IO.COM (Walter Bright) Organization: Data I/O Corporation; Redmond, WA Lines: 24 In article <8905081532.AA02862@beaches.hub.toronto.edu> thomson@hub.toronto.edu (Brian Thomson) writes: >In article <1334@nusdhub.UUCP> rwhite@nusdhub.UUCP (Robert C. White Jr.) writes: >>Just because you (culutrally) have chosen to use a strange unit >>name for your currency dson't mean that every refrence to that >>unit refres to your curency. >Noting that the words 'peso' and 'lira' both mean 'pound', I'd say that >those of us whose currency is not named after a unit of weight are >the ones with the strange units. The history of the word 'dollar' is: There is a valley in Austria, I forget the name, where there was a very rich silver mine in medieval times. The silver was minted into local coins, called 'talers' (the German word for valley is 'tal'). This was obviously shortened to 'taler'. The most popular currency in the American colonies was the Spanish 'piece of eight', also called a 'dollar', the englishification of 'taler'. The fathers of the Constitution merely codified existing practice. (Ever wonder why a quarter is 'two bits'? Remember a dollar is a 'piece of eight'?) This has, of course, absolutely nothing to do with comp.lang.c!