Only in a context where several sorts of 'pound' are possible (e.g. a bank) do you need to say 'sterling'. Even then, you only need to specify 'sterling' once (the first time you use it).
b
hello, i want to ask about the currency information in writing ielts section 1, normally the question state the name or the symbol such as (thousand pounds sterling). obviously it in three words and do i need write it again n again everytime i state the amounts? or i just minimise it to (tps) or i just can remind in in first paragraph the the rest passage just numbers?
Only in a context where several sorts of 'pound' are possible (e.g. a bank) do you need to say 'sterling'. Even then, you only need to specify 'sterling' once (the first time you use it).
b
PS Don't just invent your own abbreviations - 'tps' doesn't mean what you want it to mean. Occasionally, a bank using an old computer that can't handle a "£" sign (or more likely their computers can, but the want to be able to communicate with older systems) uses the abbreviation "GBP"; I've never seen that abbreviation used by an ordinary person.
b
From reading what you have posted, I would suggest that you be more concerned with using proper English when writing, more than being concerned about other things. Begin a sentence with a capital letter (Hello, not hello), capitalize I (never i), and capitalize IELTS. In addition, I am not at all sure of what "obviously it in three words and do i need..." means. Go back to the basics you learned and apply them.
Remember - correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing make posts much easier to read.
I have marked in red each error of capitalisation, spelling, punctuation or grammar.
You certainly can't change the entire phrase "a thousand pounds sterling" to an abbreviation. The abbreviation only refers to the name of the currency, not the amount. You can write "a thousand pounds sterling" as:
£1000
1000 GBP
One thousand pounds sterling
Whichever one you use first in your writing, stick with it through the piece. Don't change between them.
Remember - correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing make posts much easier to read.
I admit I was unduly dismissive about GBP. (I dislke it intensely, and let my feelings get the better of me!
)
b
adydean: Speakers of French (and very probably other languages that I don't know) assume that on the analogy of l'important they can say 'the important'. You can't. It's either 'the importance of...' or 'the important thing about...'
b