ANSWERS: 8
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a fancy E
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I always thought it was a fancy L.
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It's an L. It used to be used for lire in Italy, and for pounds in Britain because the Latin for 'pound' is 'Libra', and in the old British currency prices were stated as £10-14s-6d, Librae 10, 14 solidi, and 6 denarii, ten pounds, fourteen shillings and 6 pence. There were twelve pence to the shilling, and twenty shillings to the pound. It's a wonder it took us so long to convert to decimal currency. This happened on 15th February 1971.
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A British pound.
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An L and an E mixed together.
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"L"
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Looks like a capitol "L".
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I think it looks like an L, but one time when I was in England I got a receipt where the font made it look slightly more like an E.
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