Pound sign
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
฿ • ₵ • ¢ • $ • ₡ • B/. • ₫ • € • ƒ • ₲ • ₭
£ • ₤ • ₥ • ₦ • ₱ • P • R • Sk • ₨
৲ • S/. • ৳ • R$ • $ • ₮ • ₩ • ¥ • zł • ₴ • ₪
Former signs
₳ • ₢ • ₰ • ₯ • ₠ • ₣ • Lm • ℳ • ₧ • I/.• Kčs
Image:Currency-Symbol Regions of the World circa 2006 cropped.png
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- See also: Pound (currency).
The pound sign ("₤" or later more commonly in the UK "£") is the symbol for the pound sterling – the currency of the United Kingdom (UK). The same symbol is (or was) used for currencies of the same name in some other countries and territories (There are other countries whose currency is called "the pound", but these do not use the £ symbol.
Both symbols derive from librum, the basic Roman unit of weight (about 0.329 kg), in turn derived from the Latin word for scales or balance. The pound became a British unit of weight, and the pound currency unit was so named because it was originally the value of 1 pound Tower Weight (326 g) of fine (pure) silver. Incidentally, the pre-decimalisation penny (of which 240 made £1) took the symbol d from the Latin word denarius, the Roman 'penny'.
The pound sign, like the dollar sign ("$"), is usually placed before the number (i.e. "£12,000" and not "12,000£"), and is usually not separated from the following number, or is separated only by a thin space.
The symbol "₤" is also known as the lira sign. In Italy, prior to the adoption of the euro, the symbol was used as an alternative to the more usual L to indicate prices in lire (but always with double horizontal lines).
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[edit] Computing
[edit] Codepoints
The symbol "£" has Unicode code point U+00A3 (inherited from Latin-1)[1]. It has a HTML entity reference of £ and has an XML decimal entity reference of £.
The symbol "₤" has Unicode code point U+20A4, decimal entity reference ₤.
[edit] Entry methods
The PC UK keyboard layout has the "£" symbol on the 3 number key, where an American keyboard has the number sign ("#").
On a US-International keyboard, the symbol can be accessed with the key combination AltGr+Shift+4.
The symbol "£" is in the MacRoman character set, and so can be generated on most Mac OS keyboard layouts, typically through Option+3. Under Microsoft Windows, it can be accessed through the Alt codes 0163, 156, or 412.[citation needed]
[edit] See also
de:£es:£ sv:Pundtecken

