if its does not have a mint stamp it was minted in philly
A certified letter should be written just as any other business letter, but you should note above the name and address of the person to whom it is addressed "Sent Certified Mail, Article No. ***********" The Article Number should correspond to the Certified Mail Receipt form (PS Form 3800) from the USPS. This means that you should pick up the form from the Post Office before you print your letter, so that the article number can be printed, rather than hand-written in.
The two dots above a letter, you mean, would be called a diaeresis and/or an umlaut.
IQ typically doesnt change with age. It is 4 points above average, which is pretty smart
A dot above a letter is known as a 'diacritic dot'. The common name for the diacritic dot above an i or a j is a 'tittle'.
It is usually represented by a lower case letter with a horizontal arrow above it. In print, the letter will usually be bold.
No mint mark means the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
Eisenhower Dollars were minted from 1971 through 1978 at the Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco mints. The mint mark is located on the Obverse [heads] side of the coin at the base of Eisenhower's neck and above the date. A letter "D" indicates the coin was minted at the Denver mint. An "S" indicates the coin was minted at the San Francisco mint. If there is no letter, that indicates the coin was minted at Philadelphia. Please examine your coin to determine the date it was minted and the mint where it was struck. When you have this information, post a new question concerning it and an estimated value can be given.
The 1880 Morgan Dollar was produced at 4 different US Mint facilities and has 9 different varities. The values for these each of these coins are different and a list showing all of them would be extensive. You can identify the mint at which your coin was produced by looking on the reverse [tails] side and finding a small letter or pair of letters [ called a mint mark] just above the letters "DO" in the word "Dollar". A letter "O" indicates the coin was minted at New Orleans. A letter "S" indicates the coin was minted at San Francisco. The letters "CC" indicate the coin was minted at Carson City. If there is no letter above the "DO" in "Dollar" that indicates the coin was minted in Philadelphia. Please locate the mint mark, identify your coin and then post a new question containing the information. Then an estimated value can be given.
First you have to locate the mintmark. From 1796 to 1869 all of the quarters were minted in Philadelphia and have no mintmark. From 1840 to early 1916 the mintmark can be found on the reverse [tails] side of the coin under the eagle. From late 1916 to 1930 the mint mark can be found to the left and slightly above the date. From 1932 to 1967 the mintmark can be found on the reverse [tails] side of the coin beneath the wreath under the eagle. From 1968 to present the mintmark can be found on the obverse [heads] side of the coin just to the right of the ribbon in George Washington's hair. No mintmark letter indicates the coin was minted in Philadelphia. The letter "D" indicates the coin was minted in Denver. The letter "S" indicates the coin was minted in San Francisco.
After the 'complimentary closing' (Sincerely, With Regards, Yours, etc.) there should be a space before your typed or printed name:Sincerely,What A. Writer
A "D" indicates that it was minted in the Denver Mint.
Australian Threepences minted from 1910 to 1915 were minted at the Royal Mint London and have no mintmark. Australian Threepences minted from 1916 to 1926 were minted at either the Sydney Mint or the Melbourne Mint. Sydney Mint coins have no mintmark, the coins minted at the Melbourne Mint and have an "M" below the date. Australian Threepences minted from 1927 to 1941 were minted at the Melbourne Mint and have no mintmark. Australian Threepences minted from 1942 to 1944 were minted at the Melbourne Mint, the San Francisco Mint (USA) and the Denver Mint (USA). The coins minted at the Melbourne Mint have no mintmark. Coins minted at the San Francisco Mint will have an "S" below the units digit of the date. Coins minted at the Denver Mint will have a "D" below the units digit of the date. Australian Threepences minted from 1947 to 1964 were minted at the Melbourne Mint and have no mintmark. Some Australian Threepences minted in 1951 were minted at the Royal Mint London. The mintmark is "PL". The "P" appears above the first "E" in "THREE", the "L" appears above the "E" in "PENCE".
Superscripts are figures, numbers, indicators, or symbols that are smaller than the usual line of type. They are set slightly above the usual line.
That depends on how your map is printed, and on how you're holding it.If it's printed with south at the top and you hold it as printed,, then all 50 United Statesare on or above the parallel of 60 north latitude ... 49 of them completely, and Alaskaonly slightly.If you're holding a map with north at the top, then only Alaska is above that parallel,and not completely.
z was actually thrown out of the alphabet by the greeks. When it was put back in the alphabet they just put it last.
The Saint-Gaudens double eagle was produced at 3 US Mint facilities in 1924; Philadelphia which is shown here as 1924-P, Denver which is shown here as 1924-D and San Francisco which is shown here as 1924-S. To determine which coin you have you must locate the mint mark which can be found just above the date. The letter "D" is for Denver. The letter "S" is for San Francisco. If there is no letter above the date the coin was minted in Philadelphia. The mintages for each of the coins are shown in the following list: 1924-P.....................4,323,500 1924-D.....................3,049,500 1924-S......................2,927,500
The mint mark that you will find on the 1961 Washington quarter is the letter "D" and it is located on the reverse side of the coin just above the letters "ER" in the word "QUARTER". These coins were minted in Denver, Colorado. The 1961 Washington quarter was also minted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania but in 1961 Philadelphia was not putting a mint mark on the coins produced there.