Originally posted by: Scarpozzi
Good question... I'd guess it might have started from the English or some other country? I don't think it would have originated in the US because we didn't invent our language...
It would help though when you're stating abbreviations for large amounts of money. $1B = 1 billion dollars
Although the $ sign originally referred to a Spanish coin, it was
the revolting British -> American colonists who made the transition
from ps to the new sign. (This is apparently also why we write $1
instead of 1$; it mimics the British use of the pound sign.) So,
while it did not originally refer to the U.S. dollar, the symbol
does legitimately claim its origins in that country.
Originally posted by: filmmaker
I believe it is so when we are reading it that we antipate that it will be a numberical money ammount. Like $456,676,435.78.![]()
Originally posted by: Eli
Why doesen't the $ on the computer have 2 vertical lines through it?![]()
