The currency used by the Mughal Empire was called the rupee.
Pice used to be a coin in India.
The answer will depend on the currency being used. For example, the US does not have a 20 pence coin which the UK does, conversely, the UK does not have a 25 pence coin.
Yes, it is an actuall coin. It has no monitary value
The answer depends on the country or region that you are referring to. For example, the US has a 25 cent coin but not a 20 cent coin. The Eurozone, on the other hand, has a 20 cent coin but not a 25. And since you have not bothered to clarify the region, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
a Indian currency note made from cotten not from paper
The alloy is a ferritic stainless steel.
Paper Money and coin money is used in Pakistan..... and rupee is currency of Pakistan..
No, a 5p coin is not magnetic. The material used to make UK coins, including the 5p coin, is not attracted to magnets.
The rupee till 1939 where made of pure silver metal. The rupee in circulation where generally the rupees minted in that perticular year. in 1939 due to the second world war the cost of bullion (metal ) silver rose much above the actual value of rupee, hence resulted in the 1 rupee coin of 1939 to be used as silver, and hence was melted to be used as silver , to combat this even government witdrew and melted them , and since 1940 the quantity of silver metal was reduced , and finally they where made of nickel in 1947.
Today, two metals are used in Indian coins:Cupro-Nickel in two and five rupees.Ferratic Stainless Steel in the rest (one rupee coin and fifty, twenty five and ten paise coins).
The currency that India uses is the Rupee.
The kind of money that India uses is an Indian rupee. It originally used to be a silver coin but was later changed to paper.
The first coin was made in India. The purpose of it was to have a system of money so people could trade. This brought on a whole new era within India.
What was the rate of the rupee against the British sterling pound in 1998?
Since copy coins don't have any standards, anyone can make a copy coin out of any material (lead, zinc, gold, silver, copper, etc.) only a coin dealer or jeweler who sees your coin in person can guess at what it is made out of. It has no collector value, the only value comes from the metals used to make it. Most are just gold-plated copper and have no value though.
A metal disc used to make a coin is called a planchet. It serves as the blank piece of metal that will be struck with a design and inscriptions to create a coin.