Oh good. An easy one. It’s £54.95
Trying to learn something at all imaginable places, I would like to ask why there is this "sign" £ or £ for the "British Pound" (one horizontal bar in the center), because in hotels at check-ins, you have seen in "pre-€-times" sometimes also this " ₤ " for the Italian Lira (2 horizontal bars in the center) and still today this sign for the Turkish Lira: " ₺ ".
OK, I could understand the similarity of "L" for "Lira", but why " £ " for the British Pound? And what exactly does "one Pound
Sterling" mean?
And by the way: The £ still seems to be a bit stronger than the €, when you only take into account the exchange rate of 1 £ : 1,16 € ... yet.
Although: German science fiction - lovers of "Perry Rhodan"-stories always called the € the currency of "Euronen" like "Dublonen" = "Doubloons" and it was never meant to be a name of German trust for the €. But we Germans like very much to travel other countries as tourists without having to change the money in our pockets.
(Hrm, I almost wrote "invade" instead of "travel", wanting to mention Mallorca
(= usually regarded as "our" 17th German "Bundesland"), Spain and Italy ... sorry ... must be a kind of historical Freudian-German reflex out of the deepest darkest German forests, I think ...
)
I just found two more pictures which may fit here "in" (?) or so: