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A Quid, A 'Bob' And A Tanner.

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habiru001's Avatar
United States
236 Posts
 Posted 04/04/2006  10:08 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add habiru001 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
I am presenting a quizz so to speak- If we had visited England 45 years ago, we most likely would hear terms regarding there money- like "Quid, Tanner, or a Bob' Now then tell me what these terms represented- and you will be entilted to a "Gold Star"
Habiru001 -- Also what do you think a Quid would buy?
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KLD's Avatar
Australia
1079 Posts
 Posted 04/04/2006  10:13 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add KLD to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Quid?= A pound
Tanner?= never heard off maybe a shilling
Bob = known as a florin?

There my guesses.

I am interest to the exact meanings.
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swamperbob's Avatar
United States
5362 Posts
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habiru001's Avatar
United States
236 Posts
 Posted 04/04/2006  10:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add habiru001 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Well, KlD, you made us go through all that history to find out the meaning of those terms. The guy who wrote that up- took it out of a little know work now published in 1962 by K R Bressett. Except your history has had some additions to it. One really nice thing about Google, you can find out anything you wish to know- Anyway thanks to K L D -- I am a bit disappointed with such a quick reply as I wanted it to be more like a game. that's the kid in me.
Habiru001
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rggoodie's Avatar
United States
23478 Posts
 Posted 04/04/2006  10:39 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add rggoodie to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Answers were also previously posted on this forum- all you had to do was search the archived forums for quid and the history is also there.
have a look here
http://www.coincommunity.com/forum/...chTerms=quid
rggoodie
aka Richard
"catch em doing something right"
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KLD's Avatar
Australia
1079 Posts
 Posted 04/04/2006  10:53 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add KLD to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I was close.

Next time instead of guessing I should look it up.....LOL
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humpybong's Avatar
Australia
1262 Posts
 Posted 04/04/2006  11:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add humpybong to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Here are a couple more for you.

Well if a "bob" is a shilling and "2 Bob" is a florin what is a....

trey

zac

deener
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Ętheling's Avatar
United Kingdom
438 Posts
 Posted 04/05/2006  01:49 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ętheling to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I think 'Guinea' should be mentionned here! A guinea ended it's days as a £1/1/- coin (one pound and one shilling, or 21 shillings depending how you prefer to phrase it), however, it had originally started out as a £1 coin in the 1660s. The coin's value was floated on the market until about 1717 and thus fluctuated often, it has been worth anywhere between 20/- and 30/-! (i.e £1 and £1/10/-) which is quite a variance. It was set at 21/- in the 1710s to prevent confusion caused by fluctuations. The name of the coin was officially the 20 shilling peice but as you can imagine it didn't stay as a £1 coin for long and thus they soon got named as those coins from Guinea in Africa (which is where the gold came from), hence they became guineas, unofficially at first. By their demise in 1816 everyone knew them as guineas.

Also note;

Dollar = 5/-
Half Dollar = 2/6d


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tbirde56's Avatar
United States
30 Posts
 Posted 04/05/2006  06:20 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tbirde56 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
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Sap's Avatar
Australia
16806 Posts
 Posted 04/05/2006  06:41 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I reckon you've stumped the non-Aussies there, BM. Those are peculiarly Australian slang words for our pre-decimal coins, popularised in the years during and after World War I.

A "trey" was a threepence. Obvious derivation: just say "three" in a funny accent.

A "zac" was a sixpence. I have no idea why. Debate rages. Possibly saying "six" in a really, really funny accent.

A "deener" was a shilling. Debate rages here too. I suspect it's something linked with the old French denomination "denier", in turn derived fromt the Roman "denarius". But that all seems a bit too sophisticated for a bunch of Aussie diggers, though. [:p]

The other Aussie money-slang that comes to mind was the "brick" - a £10 note, our highest denomination in regular circulation. Why a "brick"? Well, it's red, and rectangular...

There was much talk in the coin magazines in the leadup to decimal conversion in 1966, about "losing the old coins with the old nicknames" and "what new nicknames will we give to the new coins". In the end, we seem to have given up on nicknames: 20 cents is 20 cents, end of story.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Ętheling's Avatar
United Kingdom
438 Posts
 Posted 04/05/2006  08:44 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ętheling to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The Cockney nicknames throw me as well, all this Pony and Monkey business. I can never remember what they are!
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humpybong's Avatar
Australia
1262 Posts
 Posted 04/05/2006  11:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add humpybong to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Yes Sap I think you are right....had 'em stumped.

Looks like some need some training on the aussie "darkside"....lol

Valued Member
United Kingdom
104 Posts
 Posted 04/06/2006  4:02 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Georgiestar to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
my dad seems to say bob and 2 bob now, when hes handing out his money lol!!I never really botherd to asked him about it :)so thanks for all the information :) as for the tanner never heard of that one, and the quid well most people say that for the £.
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Goodasgold's Avatar
Australia
125 Posts
 Posted 05/14/2006  08:20 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Goodasgold to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Now let's see ... Ha'penny (halfpenny-1/2d.) penny(1d.) trey(threepence-3d.) zack (sixpence-6d.) bob (shilling-1'-). two-bob(2'-).

And Notes .... Ten-bob(ten shillings) quid(1 pound) fiver / tenner (both self explanatory); just that tenner sometimes called "brick", due to dimensions and colour - another "no-brainer"!

And a guinea was one pound and one shilling. But from the mid 40's this terminology was considered a bit quaint and un-necessary, so rarely used by ordinary people.

Now this is strictly street-corner recollection ... (sold newspapers after school, as often we did); and when papers leapt from 2d. to 3d. over night we immediately lost our keep-the-penny-change from shiny throopence.

Still haven't recovered ..!
Edited by Goodasgold
05/14/2006 08:56 am
New Member
United States
28 Posts
 Posted 05/14/2006  2:34 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add zimba to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
My friends in Southern Africa sometimes talked about a coin called a "tickey." I think it was a 3d (2.5 cents after they went decimal).
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scoutjim99's Avatar
United States
4589 Posts
 Posted 05/14/2006  2:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add scoutjim99 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
quote goodasgold
fiver / tenner (both self explanatory); just that tenner sometimes called "brick", due to dimensions and colour - another "no-brainer"!

sorry goodasgold ther are some yanks here who stll are going huh,what LOL
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