Want this question answered?
The last silver quarters were minted in 1964.
A shape is considered regular when all sides are of equal length.
I think you can tell if a shape has a square corner by seeing if the corner has a 90 degree angle. If it is 90 degress than it is a square corner.
0.8129
The volume doesn't tell the dimensions. It doesn't even tell the shape.
You have to be more specific. First off, what Barber coin is it? There are Barber dimes, quarters and half-dollars. Secondly, you have to tell us the mintmark of the coin, along with the condition before we can tell you the value.
No circulating US coins were ever made of sterling silver (0.925 fine). US dimes, quarters, and halves minted up till 1964, and dollars up to 1935, were made of coin silver which is 0.900 fine.
For U.S. dimes and quarters, anything dated before 1965 is silver.
The 11-sided design was chosen to help make the coin easy to tell apart from other coins, especially to help people who are visually impaired or blind. Those of us who are sighted can tell by its color, but for someone who relies on touch the 11 sides distinguish it from similar sized pieces such as quarters and halves.
25 X 4 = you tell me
The easy way is by the dates. Halves made in 1964 or before are 90% silver and 10% copper. Kennedy halves from 1965 to 1970 are only 40% silver. All regular issue halves from 1971 to date are copper-nickel.
No, none can tell that by the shape of a leaf, unless a certain kind of leaf is poisonous and has a certain shape, but not for all leaves.
No
The last silver quarters were minted in 1964.
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YOU LOOK AT IT! how stupid are you?
its job