The plural of shilling is shillings.
The plural of shilling is shillings.
"Shilling" is a noun and refers to a silver or cupro-nickel coin used by many countries.
A shilling is an English coin in use until decimalization in the mid-sixties. Back in the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries, one shilling was the payment due to someone who enlisted in the army or navy. If you had accepted or taken "the King's shilling" you had entered into an agreement to be a part of the military, and thus to be subject to military justice, including the provisions forbidding desertion. Press gangs and other unscrupulous recruiters used to drop shillings into people's drinks or slip them into their hands or pockets, then haul them away, since they had taken the King's shilling.
The plural of 'this' is 'these' and the plural of 'that' is 'those'.
The plural form of can is cans.
The plural for the noun loss is losses; the plural possessive is losses'.
John Shilling has written: 'The trial of John Shilling'
Ivy Shilling's birth name is Ivy May Shilling.
About the same as a british shilling 24 cents a shilling
There are 4 Farthings (Fourthings) in a Penny, and 12 Pennies in a Shilling, therefore there are 48 Farthings in a Shilling.
A shilling is worth more than a penny. In the British currency system, there are 12 pennies in a shilling.
One antonym for "shilling" could be "denouncing" or "criticizing."
Somali shilling was created in 1962.
Lindsay Shilling was born in 1959.
Tanzanian shilling was created in 1966.
Jim Shilling died in 1986.
Jim Shilling was born in 1914.
Eric Shilling died in 2006.