Wiki User
∙ 15y agoThis coin with the "V" is normally called the "v" nickel, the coin is a five cent piece.
The coins DO have a value on them - they have the word CENTS, and "V" is the Roman numeral for 5 - remember them?
Without knowing the coins' exact dates it's not easy to put a value on them. To give a ballpark figure as of 02/2009, 1900-vintage Liberty nickels retail for about $3-4 in worn condition, $5-6 if moderately worn, $12-14 if only slightly worn.
Wiki User
∙ 15y agoUncirculated coins are 50 cents, average circulated coins are 3 to 5 cents
3 to10 cents at the most for average coins, uncirculated coins are 50 cents to a dollar
Brilliant uncirculated coins sell for 50 cents or more, depending on the grade of the coins. Brown coins are 10 to 25 cents.
Coins in average circulated condition are valued at 3 to 10 cents. Uncirculated coins 50 cents
The United States uses the dollar, which is made up of 100 cents. Current circulating coins are minted in the following denominations: 1 cent (penny) 5 cents (nickel) 10 cents (dime) 25 cents (quarter) 50 cents (half dollar) 1 dollar In the past, there were coins for 1/2, 2, 3, and 20 cents, as well as gold coins for 2.5, 5, 10, and 20 dollars. For paper money/banknotes, there are bills for 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 dollars. There used to be even larger notes at 500, 1,000, 5,000, 10,000, and 100,000 dollars, but none have been printed since the 1940s and they were withdrawn twenty years later. The $100,000 bill was only used between government offices and never saw circulation in public.
It really depends on the coin. Some coins have the denomination clearly printed such as a nickel says 5 cents, on the other hand, some say their denomination more cryptically such as "one dime" on the dime. Historically some coins just had a number such as the three cent piece and didn't say cents on it. Other coins had the value on the edge such as on the first silver dollars.
The motto In God We Trust appears on all Lincoln cents, and has been on all denominations of US coins since 1938 and paper bills since 1963.Note that the motto isn't "printed" because coins aren't printed; they're said to be struck.
Aruba's coins are called cents. Aruba's currency is the florin [AWG]. The florin is divided into 100 cents. There are coins of 5, 10, 25, and 50 cents. There also are 1 florin [100 cents] and 5 florin [500 cents] coins.
Yes. San Francisco makes proof coins every year in all denominations from cents to dollars. However these are only sold to collectors. The last circulating S-mint coins were cents struck in 1974 and dollars struck in 1980.FWIW mint marks are never printed on a coin. The normal term is "struck"; "printed" refers to paper and ink.
Lincoln cents like this are novelty coins and have no numismatic value, the maps were not applied to the coins by the US Mint. As for value you will have to find someone that wants them or try eBay.
No, you can't make 25 cents out of 22 coins
It is impossible to have 14 coins equal to 25 cents.
How do you get 67 cents wit 5 coins
If you mean U.S. coins, that would be 25 cents, 5 cents, and 5 cents.
The answer depends on the currency. The choice of coins for US cents is different to that for Euro cents, so the answer will be different.The answer depends on the currency. The choice of coins for US cents is different to that for Euro cents, so the answer will be different.The answer depends on the currency. The choice of coins for US cents is different to that for Euro cents, so the answer will be different.The answer depends on the currency. The choice of coins for US cents is different to that for Euro cents, so the answer will be different.
2 quaters (50 cents), 3 dimes (30 cents), 4 pennies (4 cents) which is 9 coins
10 pennies and 8 nickels =18 coins 10 cents + 40 cents = 50 cents