The value of any coin is based on its condition, date, and mintmark. Improving the question to provide this information would help tremendously. As for the "double-stamped" aspect, this really depends on the details. Many modern coins show signs of what is called "strike doubling," which simply means that the die that hits the coin bounces, causing a shelf-like doubling effect to be seen. This type of doubling is quite common, and adds no extra value for collectors. Older coins, made when dies were hand-tooled or hand-modified, may show signs of a doubled die, where a single die may have more than one image on it. This type of doubling can bring extra value to the coin. A third type of doubling, another false kind, is die breakage, such as what caused the "extra leaf" so-called "errors" on Wisconsin state quarters. Some of these can add collectible value, depending on how common the error is. Finally, there can be a type of double-strike where the coin gets stuck in the press and actually is struck by one or both dies multiple times. These are inherently unique, and can add significant collector's value. You should check with a coin dealer or an expert in error coins to verify whether your particular example is a common error or a valuable one.
Your coin has been chemically altered -- like with acid -- and has no added value.
I'm not sure what you mean "mixed with a penny". If the coin is made out of copper-nickel like an ordinary dime, but has a cent image struck* on top of the dime image, that's possibly a mint error that happened when a dime accidentally got mixed in with cent blanks and was struck a second time. That's definitely a collectable error but you'd have to take it for in-person appraisal to be sure. If one side is a cent and the other side is a dime, it's a fake made by joining halves of 2 genuine coins, and has no value other than as a curiosity. (*) FWIW, coins are said to be struck or minted, rather than "stamped".
the value of a dime is ten cents
Because the value of it is worth half the value of a dime.
Soundslike a magician's coin -- worth a couple of dollars.
You might go to PCGS.com or get a copy of the coin Red Book. Hope this helps
About a dime.
This is a rare misstruck error and is worth up to $90.00 according to condition.
Your coin has been chemically altered -- like with acid -- and has no added value.
20 lol
I'm not sure what you mean "mixed with a penny". If the coin is made out of copper-nickel like an ordinary dime, but has a cent image struck* on top of the dime image, that's possibly a mint error that happened when a dime accidentally got mixed in with cent blanks and was struck a second time. That's definitely a collectable error but you'd have to take it for in-person appraisal to be sure. If one side is a cent and the other side is a dime, it's a fake made by joining halves of 2 genuine coins, and has no value other than as a curiosity. (*) FWIW, coins are said to be struck or minted, rather than "stamped".
$34900
the value of a dime is ten cents
Because the value of it is worth half the value of a dime.
The coin needs to be seen for an assessment, take it to a coin dealer.
Soundslike a magician's coin -- worth a couple of dollars.
A dime has a face value of 10 cents.