It's not pure silver. Up to 1964 circulation U.S. dimes, quarters, and halves were made of an alloy of 90% silver and 10% copper.
There's more information on values, etc. at the Related Question link below
You need to be more specific. All dimes prior to 1946 had a picture of Liberty on the obverse. You need to post a new question including the date, mintmark (if any) and an estimate of condition. Only then will we be able to tell you if your coin is worth just silver scrap or thousands of dollars.
There is no such thing (well, there are a few records of '65 dimes being struck on silver planchets) the last silver dime was dated 1964, all 1965 dimes are copper-nickel.
Not enough information. Please post a new question with the coin's date and mint mark (if it has one).
It is worth about 2 dollars for the silver content. However, depending on the date, mintmark, and condition it will be worth more.
About $2.50 to $10,000 depending upon the mint mark and the condition of then coin.
It's currently worth about $1.50 for the silver.
It's just a silver Roosevelt dime worth about a dollar
It isn't a liberty dime, it is a Roosevelt dime, it isn't silver and only worth 10 cents.
It's currently worth about $2 for the silver.
0.10 USD
A 1942 Mercury silver dime could be worth between $2.00 and $30.00 depending on its condition and grade.
The value is about $2.00 just for the silver.
A 1963 Roosevelt dime is very common. Most are only valued for the silver, about $2.00.
Mine is worth about $0.90, and so is yours.
It's worth about $2.30 for its silver content.
A 1956 Canadian dime is worth approximately 2 dollars.
no such thing.
If it is a US dime, it isn't silver. Silver stopped being used in dimes after 1964, so any dime dated 1965 or later is struck in copper-nickel and are only worth face value.