Hello, is there a meaning of this plus sign in stores? If so what’s the meaning of it.

18 comments
  1. It’s the national lottery symbol “Norsk Tipping” do you can buy scratcher’s and lottery tickets etc. at those stores.

  2. It’s Norsk Tipping logo the Norwegian lottery provider. You can place your bets here (or in the app).

  3. It is the logo of Norsk Tipping. The only legal betting company in Norway. The sign signals that you can place your bets or buy you lottery tickets there. Norsk Tipping is a state owned company and has a kind of monopoly on gambling in Norway.

  4. The x or cross comes from a football betting coupon you have to mark with an x (cross) out the teams that you bet will win. These betting coupons are among the first betting games in Norsk tipping.

  5. Hidden treasure! It’s beneath the asphalt though, so good luck digging it up without the police interfering.

  6. It means that when you’ve been patiently queueing for what seems like a British eternity, late on a Friday afternoon, that some old dude will saunter along and the cashier will drop everything to go and scan his lotto ticket. He’ll then forget where he put his card, forget how to use his chip and pin and then start a conversation with the cashier about how his grandkids are future Nobel Prize winners and/or Olympic gold medal prospects.

    Meanwhile you’re being shoved in the back by the Karen behind you who expects to have been served last week, and wishes she could park her organic-produce-filled trolley in your kidneys. If she was in front of you, she’d already be checking her receipt for errors that lærling Tobias was sure to make while scanning her Funkygine ready-meals between his drawn out sips of Monster and quick peeks at his iPhone.

    As you politely ask for “to bæreposer, takk” the cashier will ignore you and say a million goodbyes to Ole Ronny as he trundles towards his E class Mercedes that is parked across two spaces outside, in the hopes of him winning the jackpot and sharing his winnings with him. /s

    That at least how it works in some parts of Bærum. 😁

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