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£10. 50 ; £13. 99 [pronunciation: saying pounds. ] £10 50 ~ ten fifty £2 43 ~ two forty-three £99 99 ~ ninety-nine ninety-nine etc In this part of the world people who mention either pounds or pence pee are vanishingly rare
saying 3-digit years | WordReference Forums Hello everyone, Can somebody tell me how 3-digit years, e g 644 BC, 985 AD, are said in English ? Is it six forty-four, nine eighty-five ? Thank you
Twenty one twenty-one | WordReference Forums ¿Los numeros a partir del veinte se ponen con un guión para separarlos (twenty-five, forty-three ) o se ponen sin guión? Lo he visto escrito de ambas formas y ahora me surgen dudas sobre cuál de las dos es la correcta o si ambas lo son ¡Gracias!
twoish OR two-ish? - WordReference Forums I am editing a piece in which the character uses the word "twoish" to reference an approximation of time "It's five thirty now How does twoish sound?" Would you, for clarity, toss a hyphen in "two-ish" to add clarity? Or is the unhyphenated version "twoish" clear enough? Thank you for any
caught him sharply on the back of the head - WordReference Forums Something came whizzing down the kitchen chimney as he spoke and caught him sharply on the back of the head Next moment, thirty or forty letters came pelting out of the fireplace like bullets This is a part of "Harry potter and the sorcerer's stone" What does "caught him sharply on the back
One hundred pounds - WordReference Forums Is it correct to say: "Are you really going to pay one hundred pounds for those shoes?" When I was in a shop earlier I heard someone say "I'm not going to pay forty pound for those", is this incorrect? Also, when writing, should it always be hyphenated such as one-hundred-pound and forty-pound?
Ring-bo-ree | WordReference Forums "And they bought a pig, and some green jackdaws, And a lovely monkey with lollipop paws, And forty bottles of ring-bo-ree, And no end of Stilton cheese " This from "The Jumblies", by Edward Lear What is the definition of "ring-bo-ree"?
hyphen in numbers [writing numbers] | WordReference Forums Could you please explain this rule to me? Does it mean that numbers thirty-one, forty-five seventy-seven ninety-nine, etc are written with a hyphen but thirty, forty, fifty, sixty, seventy, eighty, and ninety aren't? But the numbers that are between them are written with a hyphen You
in at the football match - WordReference Forums There were more than forty thousand people in the football match This would mean that there are 40,000 people participating in the match Probably too many players for one field