FZ does not appear on any British coin. The British 1853 Sixpence has the following - The obverse has the legend - "VICTORIA DEI GRATIA BRITANNIAR : REG : F : D :" around the circumference. It is abbreviated Latin for - "Victoria by the Grace of God, Queen of the British territories, Defender of the Faith", more or less. The reverse has the denomination of the coin "SIX PENCE" below the crown and within the wreath, with the date below the wreath.
50p give or take 3 or 4 pence
The inscription around the obverse of a current British Two Pence coin says - "ELIZABETH.II.D.G REG.F.D." and the year. "ELIZABETH.II.D.G REG.F.D." is abbreviated Latin for "Elizabeth II Dei Gratia Regina Fidei Defensor" meaning - Elizabeth II, by the Grace of God, Queen, Defender of the Faith. The reverse has the inscription "TWO PENCE".
Such a coin does not exist. The British 50 Pence coin was first issued in 1969. It has never featured Queen Victoria on either side and is made from a copper-nickel alloy.
There are two different British 50 Pence coins commemorating the "150th Anniversary of the Institution of the Victoria Cross", both issued in 2006. One coin depicts the obverse and reverse of the Victoria Cross, with the initials VC. The second coin shows a soldier carrying a wounded comrade against a silhouette of the Victoria Cross. Both coins were reissued in sets in 2009 as various Proof FDC coins.
That's Elizabeth II, not Elizabeth the EleventhAssuming it's from Canada, your coin is mostly silver and might sell for $5 or $6.
Pence is the plural of Penny. 1 Penny, 2 Pence, 3 Pence, 10,938,451,117 Pence.
12% of 50 pence= 12% * 50 pence= 0.12 * 50 pence= 6 pence
70 pence/1 pound = 70 pence /100 pence = 70/100 = 7/10 or 0.770 pence/1 pound = 70 pence /100 pence = 70/100 = 7/10 or 0.770 pence/1 pound = 70 pence /100 pence = 70/100 = 7/10 or 0.770 pence/1 pound = 70 pence /100 pence = 70/100 = 7/10 or 0.7
A 20 pence and a 5 pence. One of them is not a 5 pence.
It is: 10 pence - 9 pence = 1 pence
Nine Pence.