What's the difference between shilling and solidus?

Shilling


Definition:

  • (n.) A silver coin, and money of account, of Great Britain and its dependencies, equal to twelve pence, or the twentieth part of a pound, equivalent to about twenty-four cents of the United States currency.
  • (n.) In the United States, a denomination of money, differing in value in different States. It is not now legally recognized.
  • (n.) The Spanish real, of the value of one eight of a dollar, or 12/ cets; -- formerly so called in New York and some other States. See Note under 2.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The World Bank has revised down growth estimates, and the Kenyan shilling sank to a record low against the dollar in October, pushing food and fuel prices higher.
  • (2) A friend heard the butcher boast five shillings that he would be let off again by the tribunal, for the sixth time.
  • (3) A well-meaning litany of no-nos: don't be racist, don't be sexist, don't be homophobic, don't shill the World Cup to countries with human-rights issues .
  • (4) They charge fees of 3,000 Ugandan shillings – about US$2 – a term.
  • (5) A note on the text The first edition of Dracula appeared in bookshops on 26 May 1897, price six shillings, in a print run (from the publishers Archibald Constable and Co) of some 3,000 copies bound in plain yellow cloth with the one-word title in simple red lettering.
  • (6) One gloomy August afternoon Stevenson took Lloyd's shilling box of water-colours and made a map of an island.
  • (7) I'd go across the street with him and give him a 10-shilling note to get home because he never had any money, and that was it.'
  • (8) "Today I bought a goat, slaughtered, at 25,000 shillings (around £7)," she says, pausing in her shuttle between customers and pot.
  • (9) "The fossil fuel industry and its shills are willing to exploit any crisis and go to any lengths in their effort to extract more dirty fuels and dismantle critical climate policies.
  • (10) With significant donor support from Britain and others, the government has allocated more than 2tn shillings (£856,000) for education in 2010-11, about double its spending on health.
  • (11) They have only to make their papers good enough in order to win, as well as to merit, success, and the resources of a newspaper are not wholly measured in pounds, shillings, and pence.
  • (12) But the health centre hasn't the 200,000 shillings (£56) to pay for it.
  • (13) So why is my overriding desire for the next 12 months to see Morrissey and Marr (and the lawnmower parts ) to put creative differences and court cases behind them, take the shilling for a criminally vulgar reunion concert, and risk tainting my memories?
  • (14) "Some local staff working for NGOs and UN agencies ask for 3,000 shillings [around £20] to give you a food card.
  • (15) You then send between 100 shillings (74p) and 35,000 shillings (£259) via text message to the desired recipient - even someone on a different mobile network - who cashes it at an agent by entering a secret code and showing ID.
  • (16) Osteoarchaeologist Katie Tucker looked again at the bones in the museum when tests showed the team of local historians and residents, and experts from the university, that the bones from St Bartholomew, sold to a 19th-century vicar for 10 shillings as those of Alfred and his family, were centuries too late.
  • (17) The Uganda Red Cross will need to raise 2.5bn shillings (£640,000) for a three-month operation.
  • (18) And by doing so I've learned that Thiago Silva is not going to Barcelona because he has signed a new deal that will deliver a few extra PSG shillings into his pockets and keep him at the Parc des Princes until 2018.
  • (19) A young Treasury minister was once sent out to public meetings to explain currency metrication from the old 20 shillings and 12 pennies.
  • (20) In 1914 the Treasury printed and issued 10 shilling and £1 notes.

Solidus


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Greater cracking susceptibility was interpreted by considering that these eutectics solidified at solidification temperatures far lower than the nominal solidus.
  • (2) The major GSH transferase form in S. solidus (plerocercoid) showed greater biochemical relationship to the Mu family of mammalian GSH transferase compared to the mammalian Alpha or Pi families.
  • (3) Aspects of the infectivity of the plerocercoid stage and the fecundity of the adult stage of Schistocephalus solidus were examined using the chicken, Gallus gallus, as an experimental host.
  • (4) The liquidus and solidus phase boundaries were determined by the onset temperature of heating and cooling scans, respectively, because the completion temperature of a phase transition has no meaning in binary solutions.
  • (5) Gasterosteus aculeatus was the most heavily infected fish with 4 larval cestode species; for two of them (D. ditremum and S. solidus) the three-spined stickleback was found to be the required fish intermediate host.
  • (6) Protein-lipid interactions are monitored by high sensitive differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measuring (i) the shifts of transition states delta Ts* and delta Tl*, where Ts represents the solidus line, the onset of lipid chain melting, and Tl the liquidus line, the endpoint of chain melting, and (ii) the heats of transition.
  • (7) From these graphs, densities, at room temperature, solidus point and liquidus point were obtained.
  • (8) The author then relates how he was given a stickleback infected with the plerocercoid of Schistocephalus solidus, an episode which eventually led to the successful in vitro culture of the adult of this species.
  • (9) This solidus article reports on two unique cases of naviculo-medial cuneiform coalition in a 20-year-old man and a 22-year-old woman.
  • (10) Two autogenic (Triaenophorus crassus and T. nodulosus) and four allogenic (Diphyllobothrium latum, D. dendriticum, D. ditremum and Schistocephalus solidus) larval cestode species were found in 13 out of 31 fish species studied from the Bothnian Bay, NE Baltic.
  • (11) Glutathione (GSH) transferase isoenzymes have been partially resolved from the cytosol of Schistocephalus solidus (plerocercoid) by GSH affinity chromatography and chromatofocusing at pH 7-5.
  • (12) The in vitro culture of S. solidus led to the development of successful in vitro techniques for Ligula intestinalis and for Echinococcus granulosus and E. multilocularis.
  • (13) The structures of two low-gold and two silver-palladium alloys were evaluated in the as-cast and hardened conditions and in the condition achieved after annealing for 1 h at 100 degrees C below the solidus temperature.
  • (14) Using this data, the solidifying shrinkage and the shrinkage in the solidus phase were calculated.
  • (15) Among allogenic cestode species, those restricted to different definitive host species segregated their larval population in relation to the fish host, while, for example, D. ditremum and S. solidus, both maturing in fish-eating birds, had the highest percentage of co-occurrences.
  • (16) At the temperature where phase separation occurs, motion is detected as the solidus domains floating on a liquidus medium.
  • (17) Trial castings of alloys with a thermal expansion room to solidus temperature ranging from 1.60 to 1.91% showed either a very high accuracy or the possibility of improving the accuracy actually found by modifying the glycerol content of the mixing liquid used.
  • (18) Surprisingly, binary mixtures of DPPC and these cationic amphiphiles also show strongly nonideal mixing, with phase diagrams exhibiting pronounced maxima in their solidus and liquidus curves.
  • (19) The pure dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine has two well-defined solidus phases P beta' and L beta' and a liquidus phase L alpha while the pure phosphatidylserine has a broad transition from L beta to L alpha.
  • (20) There were no significant differences of thermal shrinkage in solidus between the five alloys, and each showed approximately 5vol% shrinkage.