In 1922 the only Lincoln cent struck was a 1922-D, worn dies and over polishings caused the D not to strike up well or be completely missing from the coin and are highly valued
All wheat pennies, regardless of year are worth at least 3 cents if the date is readable. Some wheat pennies though, are worth quite a bit more. For instance, the 1909 S VDB penny is worth several hundred dollars even in worn condition and so is the 1914 D penny. However, a 1909 S VDB penny in pristine condition could be worth thousands of dollars. In general, the older the wheat penny the more valuable it is. For example, most wheat pennies dated in the 1940s-1950s aren't that valuable, but wheat pennies dated in the teens and twenties are worth a lot more.
There's no way to know for sure. At present it's worth about 3 cents, so in 10 years it'll probably be worth about the same. It's not a rare or valuable coin.
The last wheat-back cents were made in 1958, so a 1992 one would be impossibly rare. If your coin has the Lincoln Memorial on the back, it's an ordinary penny worth 1¢.
Most are face value to 5 cents, so many were made that uncirculated coins are 25 cents.
They're wheat ears, not wheat straws. This design was minted for 50 years at 3 different mints, so more details are needed. Please post a new question with the coin's date and whether there is a small D or S under the date.
All wheat pennies, regardless of year are worth at least 3 cents if the date is readable. Some wheat pennies though, are worth quite a bit more. For instance, the 1909 S VDB penny is worth several hundred dollars even in worn condition and so is the 1914 D penny. However, a 1909 S VDB penny in pristine condition could be worth thousands of dollars. In general, the older the wheat penny the more valuable it is. For example, most wheat pennies dated in the 1940s-1950s aren't that valuable, but wheat pennies dated in the teens and twenties are worth a lot more.
On the 1969 S penny a doubling of the print makes it very valuable ($35 000)
The first wheat-back cents were issued in 1909, so I assume you mean 1945. 1945 was (up till then) a record year for cent production so they are not especially valuable. Current retail is a few cents if circulated, maybe a dime if almost uncirculated.
not very valuable, a pennys weight is worth a penny so it takes lots to make much money.
There's no way to know for sure. At present it's worth about 3 cents, so in 10 years it'll probably be worth about the same. It's not a rare or valuable coin.
About 3-10 cents if circulated or a dollar or so if uncirculated.
The coin is so very common circulated coins are 2 to 5 cents, one that looks like new is 10 cents.
The last wheat-back cents were made in 1958, so a 1992 one would be impossibly rare. If your coin has the Lincoln Memorial on the back, it's an ordinary penny worth 1¢.
So many were made, 3 to 5 cents on average.
All wheat penny's have the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM on them so it adds nothing to the value. Depending on coindition the coin may have a value of 3 to 25 cents
The first wheat pennies were dated 1909 so you must have an Indian Head cent. See the Related Question for more details.
A 1942 wheat penny is worth 2 cents for the copper.