One Pound GBP in 1988 had the purchasing power of about £1.80 GBP today.
A 1988 dime is worth 10 cents.
It's worth 50 cents.
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the answer to this math problem is simply 6.0
The 'Moving Picture Experts Group' (MPEG) is a working group of experts that was formed by ISO and IEC to set standards for audio and video compression and transmission.[1] It was established in 1988 and its first meeting was in May 1988 in Ottawa, Canada.[2][3][4] As of late 2005, MPEG has grown to include approximately 350 members per meeting from various industries, universities, and research institutions. MPEG's official designation is ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29 WG11 - Coding of moving pictures and audio (ISO/IEC Joint Technical Committee 1, Subcommittee 29, Working Group 11). You try to convert mpg into mov, right? You do that for your Mac? If you need import mpg to mac, just convert mpg to mov, you can find many video converter applications which can import mpg and other format videos and generate mov/other formats videos for Mac OS.
The last British One Pound note was issued in 1984. The One Pound note ceased to be Legal Tender in 1988.
A British Pound in 1988 has the purchasing power of about £1.80 GBP today.
5,000 British Pounds in 1988 would have the purchasing power of nearly Nine Thousand British Pounds today.
The Bank of England One Pound note was last issued in 1984 and ceased to be legal tender in March 1988, after the introduction of the One Pound coin in 1983.
check here ?? about $1.8 http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/data/EXUSUK.txt
Pound for Pound was created on 1988-09-21.
I believe it was Paul Gascoigne, who went from Newcastle to Tottenham in 1988.
The Royal Mint has never issued a 5 Dollar coin for British use, much less one with a "5 Dollar" symbol on it. The British use the Pound and issue a "5 Pound" coin, but not in 1988. The coin is possibly from one of the 50 plus Commonwealth countries and should have the country name on it somewhere, most likely Australia, Canada or New Zealand.
Jasmine Tambyah has written: 'The US dollar in 1989' 'A medium-term outlook for the British pound, July 1988' 'The US dollar in 1990' 'A medium-term outlook for the US dollar, February 1988'
There were 10,191,000 60th Anniversary of the end of World War 2 British Two Pound coins minted. There were 5,140,500 400th Anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot British Two Pound coins minted.
The Bank of England One Pound note was demonetised in 1988.
The Bank of England first issued paper money in 1694, but these were for irregular, and usually large amounts. The first ever British Pound notes were issued in 1797, but this was not on a permanent basis. The regular issue of the British Pound and Ten Shilling note began in 1915 when they replaced the gold Sovereign and half-Sovereign, due to financial pressures brought about by WW1. The One Pound note was last issued in December, 1984, and demonetised and withdrawn in 1988 after being replaced by a nickel/brass coin in 1983.