You have a British coin ("Georgius IV D.G. Britannia Rex F.D." is abbreviated latin for "George the Fourth, King of Britain and Defender of the Faith") dated 1821. To get a value, the denomination and condition of the coin would need to be known.
the value would probbally be pretty expensive because it would be considered an antique
Dollar General Corporation (DG)had its IPO in 2009.
Mathematically speaking, dg could be deci-grams, ie one tenth of a gram. Without a context it is impossible to give an exact answer.
dg ng rg
it has to be the wunderwaffe dg-2, its one hit kill forever and it connects to zombies with electricity
I have vtraque vnum 1760 how much is the price
Such a coin does not exist. George III was born in 1738 and was king from 1760 to 1820.
Assuming you're asking what it meansGeorge the 3rd, by the will of god king, 1813
I have one. You tell me.
You have described every British coin issued in 1797. Please provide the type of metal it appears to be made from, the diameter of the coin, the inscriptions and the design on the reverse.
Yes, it is.
The value depends on the denomination and condition. An 1887 farthing is going to have a different value than an '87 shilling.
DG
fgdf fgd gdfg dg dg dfg dfg dg dg dfg dd
dg,gedg,dcbbcdgab dg,gedg,dcbbcdgab fbgffeefeeafeedded dg,gedg,dcbbcdgab bcdgaddcdgbg dg,gedg,dcbbcdgab dg,gedg,dcbbcdgab fbgffeefeeafeedded dg,gedg,dcbbcdgab bcdgaddcdgbg
The answer is .033 dg.
DG = Dei gratia/by the Grace of God; FD = Fidei Defensor/Defender of the Faith; Britt Omn Rex (or Reg)/ King (Queen) of All Britain