Because it's one-fourth, or a quarter, of a dollar.
Quarter.
The Quarter
a quarter (I think there was a coin called a quarter)
The coin was struck over a 1941 Canadian quarter. It takes a keen eye to see the print of the Canadian coin on the American coin. A 1941 Canadian quarter was made of silver and the American quart was a clad coin (copper line in the reeded edge). So, it would seem finding silver 1970-D (no copper line) would be easier to see than the faint imprint of the Canadian quarter.
You have an altered coin worth maybe a dollar as a novelty item. I have one of these coins. It is not an altered coin. It is thicker and larger thana US quarter. Since both names on this coin are names of products by the Syngenta company, I would suspect this is some kind of advertising coin for their products.
You have to use a quarter and a nickel otherwise it's impossible.An Explanation ...This is a common brain teaser. If one coin isn't a nickel, it's the quarter. The other coin is the nickel.
Cause it's hard to flip notes
Because it's one-fourth, or a quarter, of a dollar.
Assuming American coinage, the two coins would be a 25 cent coin and a 5 cent coin. Assuming non-American coins, one is not a 10 cent coin, but the other one is. The other coin being a 20 cent coin.
A quarter and a nickel. The quarter is the coin that's not a nickel!
Australia does not have a "Quarter" coin.
Australia does not have a "quarter" coin.
Advertising is a fixed cost. Many business allocate money to each quarter to cover their advertising cost for their company.
The British have never issued a "quarter" coin.
The coin is a common quarter so spend it.
The Royal Mint does not produce a "quarter" coin.