>>A pound money (sterling) £ can be a "nicker", a "quid" (the last 2 only ever used in the singular, eg "twenty nicker/quid") or a "sov" (short for sovereign).
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>You make my point. But how about the idea that such informal or dialectic words should not be used in international forums?
It would never work. Impossible with English - there are too many things which don't have words whose first meanings would describe them, so they have to rely on second-third-fourth-nth plus context. You have already used a couple of words in their second (or further) meanings:
"you make my point" - Terry is not the manufacturer of your conical tip
"international" - now used predominantly to mean "foreign" (as in "we ship to international addresses", or "international languages"), while you used it in its obsolete meaning