check with your local mint most likey its fake if not your a lucky basterd because a crazy coin collecter will pay big bucks no doubt
"Your local mint"??? Like there's one in every shopping mall!! This is a magician's coin made outside the US Mint by milling down two real quarters and gluing them together. They are available from novelty shops for about $8 or on eBay for $2-$3. The old dies are destroyed when the mint starts making the next year's coins so there is no way a 1977 die could have been accidentally (or intentionally) used 14 years later. Hold the coin a few inches above the table and drop it, then drop a regular quarter. The real coin will "ring" and the two-headed one will "thunk".
hey i lived in washinton DC all my life it took me like two seconds every day to go the the US mint you cant blame me
If you're in DC, your "local" mint is in Philadelphia. That's quite a drive in 2 seconds!
I am a rhombus. I don't need to prove that my opposite sides are parallel. If I'm a quadrilateral with four sides that are the same length, then I am definitely a rhombus.
No, it doesn't have to be. A quadrilateral can definitely be a parallelogram only if: - Both pairs of opposite sides are parallel. - Both pairs of opposite sides are congruent. - One pair of opposite sides are both congruent and parallel. - Both pairs of opposite angles are congruent. - The diagonals bisect each other.
Every parallelogram definitely has ... which includes squares, rectangles, andrhombussae ... and any polygon with an even number of sides can have.
Well, it is definitely a quadrilateral. It could be a parallelogram (both pairs of opposite sides are parallel), a rhombus (a regular parallelogram), a trapezoid (one pair of opposite sides is parallel), a kite (each pair of adjacent sides is congruent), or none of the above.
paramid
They are the sides facing each other at opposite sides.
rectangle
Opposite sides are parallel.Opposite sides are congruent.Opposite angles are congruent.
It is worth nothing. You could try and take the two headed coin to a coin expert. But it is just a misprint.
The opposite sides of a parallelogram are parallel
A heptagon has seven sides so there are no pairs of opposite sides.
Parallelogram opposite sides are congruent opposite sides parallel