Try quarter of a teaspoon of nutmeg, 10 minutes before you go to bed. It permanently cured my insomnia. I stopped taking it after about a month, but never again had trouble sleeping.
@@carolroberts4614 Actually, Scottish banknotes are not legal tender in England, not even in Scotland. The notes are accepted as a currency anywhere in the UK, because they've been approved by the UK Parliament, but the Scottish banknotes have never been legal tender.
@@carolroberts4614 They are legal, it's just that "legal tender" has a different meaning to "legal currency". In the UK, only the notes issued by the Bank of England are the "legal tender". The Scottish banknotes are issued by 3 Scottish banks and they are a legal currency, just not legal tender. The whole thing is a bit complicated, but in short, what this means is that the Scottish banknotes have to be backed by the British pound issued by the Bank of England (or the equivalent in gold). So if Scotland issues, let's say a million pounds in Scottish banknotes, it would have to have in its vaults a million pounds issued by the Bank of England (or the equivalent in gold). The Scottish banknotes are valuable because they are backed by the British pound issued by the Bank of England which is the only legal tender in the UK.
1:55 - oh God, how I can relate to that!
Try quarter of a teaspoon of nutmeg, 10 minutes before you go to bed. It permanently cured my insomnia. I stopped taking it after about a month, but never again had trouble sleeping.
4:32 That's true. Scottish fans are the best by far. You're always welcome here in Germany.
I make amazing chocolate muffins on buttermilk, that's the only reason I buy it.
I don’t think much of the packaging on the butter milk cartons looks like a “****”
I'm starting to wish we had Aldi's in Canada so I could check out the middle aisle.
I thought he was giving Liam Gallagher a camping chair but took the wrong thing lol
I buy buttermilk
The one about not starting a film at 8pm - I’ve literally just done that 😊. And the over 50 one as well!
"Hey, wimminz! Stop doing stuff on the internets that all the menz likes - it personally annoys me!"
2:46 😂
apart from the fact that the cabbie is not obliged to accept currency not issued by the bank of England 😅😅😅
Unless things have changed recently, Scottish money is legal tender in England.
@@carolroberts4614 Actually, Scottish banknotes are not legal tender in England, not even in Scotland. The notes are accepted as a currency anywhere in the UK, because they've been approved by the UK Parliament, but the Scottish banknotes have never been legal tender.
Really? I worked in retail for about 30 years from 1968, and was told Scottish ones were legal, but Irish weren't!
@@carolroberts4614 They are legal, it's just that "legal tender" has a different meaning to "legal currency". In the UK, only the notes issued by the Bank of England are the "legal tender". The Scottish banknotes are issued by 3 Scottish banks and they are a legal currency, just not legal tender.
The whole thing is a bit complicated, but in short, what this means is that the Scottish banknotes have to be backed by the British pound issued by the Bank of England (or the equivalent in gold). So if Scotland issues, let's say a million pounds in Scottish banknotes, it would have to have in its vaults a million pounds issued by the Bank of England (or the equivalent in gold). The Scottish banknotes are valuable because they are backed by the British pound issued by the Bank of England which is the only legal tender in the UK.