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Eric 12-08-2009 23:33

Ok, what is it ...
 
Is a gill a half pint, or a quarter pint .... I remember it's being a half .... If you order a gill, what do you expect to get? If my memory tells me that a gill is a half, and google tells me it is a quarter, who is right?

steeljack 12-08-2009 23:38

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Have to agree with you on this one Eric, never understood it myself ...4 gills =1 pint in official measure , maybe its one of those Lancashire things , anyone know if the term "gill" meaning half a pint is used anywhere apart from Lancashire in the UK

accyman 13-08-2009 00:39

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Eric (Post 735840)
If you order a gill, what do you expect to get?

1/2 a pint or if gill happens to be the busty barmaids name then lucky would do :D

Eric 13-08-2009 00:56

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by accyman (Post 735852)
1/2 a pint or if gill happens to be the busty barmaids name then lucky would do :D

Let's hear more about the busty barmaids .... a few pics maybe:eek:;)

steeljack 13-08-2009 02:50

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
after reflection on the subject and looking thru a glass of Bushmills , I'm thinking that pub measures (optics) of spirits were based on a fraction of a gill (1/4 pint) , the English measure 1/5th of a gill (20 to the pint) and the Scots measure 1/4 of a gill (16 to a pint) So how a 1/2 of a pint of Beer became known as a gill I have no idea . :D :D

Eric 13-08-2009 03:11

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by steeljack (Post 735855)
after reflection on the subject and looking thru a glass of Bushmills , I'm thinking that pub measures (optics) of spirits were based on a fraction of a gill (1/4 pint) , the English measure 1/5th of a gill (20 to the pint) and the Scots measure 1/4 of a gill (16 to a pint) So how a 1/2 of a pint of Beer became known as a gill I have no idea . :D :D

Me neither .... enjoy the Bushmills ... I'm sucking on Fireball .... but I might have a gill or two later;)

flashy 13-08-2009 06:56

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
My dad (64 year old man who lives next door) always says 'i'm going for a gill' when he's going to the pub, he always said it was half a pint

Barrie Yates 13-08-2009 07:03

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Hope this helps - but must admit that to me a gill was always half a pint - of Thwaites's

English weights and measures: Volume and capacity

entwisi 13-08-2009 07:08

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
i seem to recall as well that in England Beer can be sold only in 1/2 and 1/3 of a pint or multiples thereof....

cashman 13-08-2009 07:24

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
well a gill was always half a pint in lancashire, so anywhere else says different must be wrong.:D

K.S.H 13-08-2009 08:50

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Ok, what is it ...

NOT ENOUGH :D

jaysay 13-08-2009 09:00

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Eric (Post 735853)
Let's hear more about the busty barmaids .... a few pics maybe:eek:;)

When I hear the term busty barmaids it always reminds me of a pub I frequented in Peckham when working the South London area for Shopfitters, we went in the Adam and Eve on Peckham High Street, the landlady was a lovely girl who served behind the bar most nights topless:D:D and she was a big girl too:rolleyes:

jaysay 13-08-2009 09:03

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by steeljack (Post 735855)
after reflection on the subject and looking thru a glass of Bushmills , I'm thinking that pub measures (optics) of spirits were based on a fraction of a gill (1/4 pint) , the English measure 1/5th of a gill (20 to the pint) and the Scots measure 1/4 of a gill (16 to a pint) So how a 1/2 of a pint of Beer became known as a gill I have no idea . :D :D

Could never get used to work the Scotch run 1/4 measure played havoc with my heed the morning after:D Slang:mosher:

jelly baby 20-08-2009 14:53

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
I think that a gill is, in fact, a third of a pint. Although in Lancashire, it was a commonly used term for a half.

wadey 20-08-2009 15:01

Re: Ok, what is it ...
 
Imperial unit of volume for liquid measure, equal to one-quarter of a pint or five fluid ounces (0.142 litre), traditionally used in selling alcoholic drinks.

In southern England it is also called a noggin, but in northern England the large noggin is used, which is two gills.


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