it is the number sign
The cent sign looks like a c with a line in it.Hope that helped!!!
A circle with a cigarette on it with a line through it.
$ , % Dollar sign, Comma , Percentage
WATCH, SEE & OBSERVE.
Answer:If a US penny has a P printed on it, it means that it was made in Pennsylvania. If the letter is a D, then it is was made in DelawareAnswer:Because prior to the decimalisation of the English currency there were 20 shillings in a pound and 12 pennies in a shilling which were represented as Lsd. The L stood for Libra (Latin for pound) The s stood for solidi (a Latin word for shillings) the d stood for denarii (a Latin word for pence)
Pound is also known as the number sign (#). When prompted to press pound, just press that.
The star and pound sign came when MCI started there phone service. AT&T was the only company till then. If it was an MCI call you would hit the star sign. When you were done with the call, you would hit the pound sign.
the at sign looks like this: @
There are some special short codes on mobile phones that begin with the pound sign. For example, within Ohio, you can dial #OSP (#677) for the Ohio State Police.
A pound the sign is like this £1
what does a no power boat ahead sign look like
it looks like the delta sign.
The square sign looks like a square.
The Pound Sign Is This £
It looks like this "&".
Unless you meant THIS pound sign : £ , £(halfwidth & fullwidth variants, respectively). The L shaled sign probably comes from libra, literally pound (the weight unit). This would also explain the ethymology of many currencies called "Lira" (L./₤/Lit. ,₺, Lm, £sd, £S, ل.ل. , I£/ל"י ) as well as the Livre Tournois (₶). I think the lb bar sign (℔) might also have been used as a scribal abbreviation for libra (the weight pound), although I cannot confirm... see if you can contact a typographist, or a historian, or somethiŋ... Oddly, the currency sign of þᵉ gꚙd ol' Roman Semuncia sign (𐆒) also looks like a fancy L... maybe it's unintentional & the gliph was actually supposed to be a fancy long s (ſ / ʃ)?
Like this:€