EEPhil
Number 28
I doubt it, they were hardly relevant at the time!Are any of them still relevant?

I doubt it, they were hardly relevant at the time!Are any of them still relevant?
You could say the same about prescription charges. How we managed, in England, to get them free from 60 I don't know - but am grateful! Fortunately I wasn't diagnosed (hypertension) until I was 60, otherwise I'd have needed a season ticket! Four items at £9.90 per item every 28 days = a lot (£514.80/year vs £114.50-ST vs free-over 60).It's blatant discrimination (a postcode lottery) with the lucky ones being in Wales, Northern Ireland, Scotland,
Or inductors. Microhenries are common at frequencies in the shortwave region and above.The micro- prefix is only generally needed for capacitors,
Because of equality legislation when women still got their state pension at 60. Same applied to my bus pass.How we managed, in England, to get them free from 60 I don't know
Something else for those over the pond to mess up.If English spelling made use of accents, it would be a lot less confusing!
Do you mean the sort of accents used in dictionaries to show pronunciation? New Zealand has done that because of Maori pronunciation which has cocked up anyone else reading New Zealand English.Naïve.
I've learnt something today. The two dots are a diaeresis not an umlaut, and indicate the vowels need to be pronounced separately (effectively the opposite of a diphthong). If English spelling made use of accents, it would be a lot less confusing!