having your head on a coin makes you power full because it makes you feel powerful and every time someone looks at the coin they will talk about and say how good you look and how rich and strong you look it will give a good impression to people.
It would assist me greatly if you provided the denomination of the coin.
To show the King's power.
I am having sever pain in my neck and the back of my head. I am having an MRI of my neck and wanted to now what that would show.
To show power like snakes
Coins have always had some form of picture or design on them. Dating back to Roman times and earlier, the purpose was to show who was in charge by having the Emperors head on the coin. These days, it possibly serves the same purpose, but also assists with visual identification of the value of the coin and which country it belongs to.
The 1885 Indian Head cent is a common date coin of the series. Most coins show very heavy wear and have values of $1.00-$5.00 depending on the grade of the coin.
Please check your coin again and post a new, separate question.First, all nickels made from 1866 (inception) to 1912 show either a shield or Liberty head design.Second, the US never made a coin called a "buffalo head" nickel. Nickels minted from 1913 to 1938 are called either "Indian head" or "buffalo" nickels. After all, they show the whole animal!
Please check your coin again and post a new, separate question.The last buffalo nickels were made in 1938.There is no coin called a "buffalo head" nickel. They're either Indian head or buffalo nickels - after all, they show the entire animal!
The flip of a fair coin is 0.5 heads and tails, so you want the probability of head & head. This probability of garlic, garlic two consecutive tosses is 0.5 * 0.5 = 0.25.
Please check your coin again. > Buffalo nickels were made from 1913 to 1938. > The first US nickels were dated 1866. > There's no coin called a "buffalo head" nickel. They're either "Indian head" or "buffalo". Buffalo nickels show the whole animal not just its head.
The Philadelphia issue 1912 Liberty Head Nickel is a common coin and most show a lot of wear and have retail values of $1.00-$3.00