One-half of a U.S. cent. Before the euro was adopted Germany's currency unit was the mark. One mark = 100 pfennige (that's the plural of "pfennig"). At its last valuation in 2002 the mark was worth about 50 cents (U.S.) so a pfennig was pretty far down on the scale.
How much inches are in one foot? The answer is 12 inches.
One gram is equal to one gram.
one unit is
One One Millionth
Cannot be answered without more information.
no its not a mint
This coin was part of the old Deutschmark and pfennig system that was used prior to the introduction of the euro in 2002. At the time the exchange rate was roughly 1 DM = 50¢ U.S. There were 100 pfennige* to the mark, so your coin is, I'm sorry to say, only worth one-half of a U.S. cent. (*) "Pfennige" is the plural of "pfennig". The word is the source of our "penny".
One-half of a U.S. cent. Before the euro was adopted Germany's currency unit was the mark. One mark = 100 pfennige (that's the plural of "pfennig"). At its last valuation in 2002 the mark was worth about 50 cents (U.S.) so a pfennig was pretty far down on the scale.
Your coin was used in Germany up till the country switched to the euro in 2002. If its value is in pfennige or is at most 5 marks, it's most likely to be an ordinary circulation coin. If so, it's no longer spendable but its value at the time of conversion was roughly half as many US dollars or cents as its denomination in marks or pfennige; e.g. a 10 pf coin was worth about 5 cents. If not, please post a new question with more details including its denomination.
Unless it's uncirculated, this coin (10 pfennige, rather than a pfennig with a 10) is only worth face value, about 5 cents. It was a common circulation coin until the euro was adopted in 2002.
It's actually 10 pfennige rather than "cents". Germany did not use cents as a money unit until the euro was adopted in 2002. The value of your coin depends on its condition and mint mark. For most mint marks, a 1944 10-pf coin would retail for about $1.75 to $4.00. A coin with a "G" mint mark might sell for as much as $7.
That's FAR too broad a question to answer accurately. Germany issued dozens of different denominations of coins with hundreds of designs. Please post a new, separate question with the coin's date and denomination. For most common coins the denomination will be given in pfennige or marks.
With a dual date it's almost certainly a circulating 2 DM coin stuck in honor of the 30th anniversary of the Federal Republic of Germany. In average condition it has no added value. It was worth about US$1.00 in 2002 when Germany switched to the euro. A quality uncirculated one might sell for $2.50 to $5.00 depending on its minting date.
How much cholestoral in one egg?
how much would it be to have one tooth replaced on a denture
One character is equals to 8 bits.