A normal coin will have the head and eagle upside down from each other. When you flip the coin top-to-bottom both sides should remain upright. When you flip from side-to-side both sides should be opposite. If your coin does not fit this description, you could have a rotated reverse mint error.
The two sides of a coin are called head and tail.
There is no British One Pound coin designed with the Queen's head on both sides. It is most likely a trick coin available from magic shops. In the extremely unlikely event that a "double header" coin was minted, one side would have a raised image as usual, the other side would have the image indented or incuse.
The side that has the Presidents face on it is the head making the other side the tail.
You have what's called a magician's coin. Please see the related question for more information.
If it's not a Indian head nickel, what is it? What does the coin show on both sides of it. Post new question and include any inscriptions.
Like every other double-headed coin out there, it's a "magician's coin" made by cutting 2 normal silver dollars in half and swapping sides. The good news is that the silver in the "coin" is still worth about $10 to a metal dealer.
No. Many of these 2 headed coins are made from 2 genuine coins. A little machine work is done and the head side of each coin are fitted together. the result is a novelty coin with almost no true value.
Yes, Guatemala is a republic with a president who is both head of state and head of government.
You possibly have a commemorative souvenir token or medallion worth no more than you paid for it.
A die has six sides, so the probability of rolling an even number is 1 in 2, or 50-50. A coin has two sides, so the probability of flipping the coin and getting heads is 1 in 2, or 50-50. The probability that both will happen together is the one in two OF one in two, or one in FOUR chance that both will happen. So, the probability is 25%.
Yes both are the same coin