Nobody has mentioned one yet.
Yes. The Royal Mint has been progressively releasing 50 Pence coins featuring the 29 Olympic and Paralympic sports since October 2010.
Denomination Legal Tender Limit £5 Crown Any Amount £2 Any Amount £1 Any Amount 50 Pence £10 25 Pence (Older Crowns) £10 20 Pence £10 10 Pence £5 5 Pence £5 2 Pence £0.20 1 Penny £0.20 hope this helps
50
There need not be any but there can be up to 13.
NO!
he dosnt have any kids or a wife
British 20 Pence coins have no country name on them. 20 Pence coins from any of the British Crown Dependancies such as Jersey or Guernsey, or from an Overseas Territory such the Falkland Islands will have the "country" name on them.
To make 45 pence using silver coins (which are 5 pence coins), you can use any combination of 5 pence coins. The maximum number of 5 pence coins you can use is 9 (since 9 x 5 = 45). The different combinations include using fewer coins and substituting with higher denominations, like 20 pence or 50 pence coins, but since the question specifies silver coins, the main focus remains on combinations of 5 pence coins. Thus, the primary solution is simply using 9 coins of 5 pence each.
Zero. There is no silver in any British general circulation 50 Pence coin, and there has been no silver in any British general circulation coin from 1947 onwards.
The US has never denominated coins in pence, only cents. And in any case "pence" is plural so no coin would show the denomination "one pence". If by any chance you have a large copper coin about the size of a half dollar with the words ONE CENT on the back, you have what's called a Large Cent. Please see the Related Question for more information.
Zero. No Eire (Irish) 10 Pence coin has ever contained any silver, they are made from a copper-nickel alloy.
In 2010, the Royal Mint produced the following British general circulation coins - Two Pound coins - 2,015,000 One Pound coins - 38,505,000 50 Pence coins - 510,090 20 Pence coins - 91,700,500 10 Pence coins - 25,320,500 5 Pence coins - 180,250,500 2 Pence coins - 38,000,000 1 Penny coins - 421,002,000 A total of 797,303,590 British coins. These figures do not include any of the Proof or bullion coins or the 2012 Olympic commemorative coins. Neither does it include the coins made for the 16 other countries the Royal Mint is contracted to produce coins for.