No. For every year they have been minted, they have been minted in huge quantities, so they are neither rare nor valuable.
The best you might get for an uncirculated Proof FDC coin might be £2 GBP.
The 1983 2 Pence coin inadvertently had the word "NEW" stamped on them due to selection of the incorrect die at the Mint. These coins are very collectible, if not valuable, but were only included in some Mint Sets packaged by the Royal Mint.
For a few months in 1998, 2 Pence coins were minted from bronze.
These coins are still potentially in circulation so, unless they are part of a Proof or uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they are worth Two Pence.
Of course, and there are too many varieties to list here for valuable shillings since the coin was produced for several hundred years!
Basically anything dated 1920-1946 will be 50% silver and worth a bit in silver regardless of the condition.
Anything dated prior to 1920 will be sterling (92.5%) silver and worth silver melt regardless of the condition.
Anything dated 1947 or later is copper-nickel and as such has no melt value.
For post-1946 coins, the 1959 Scottish Reverse shilling is worth a decent amount.
Of course there are many different varieties of even copper-nickel shillings, far too many to post here. Your best bet of getting an answer for an individual year is to post a question including the year of issue. Or by purchasing a British coin guidebook such as The Standard Catalogue of English Coins, published by Spink and Son.
Five x 2 Pence coins = 10 Pence
2 pence
The only British 2 Pence coins minted in 1983 were minted for either Mint Uncirculated or Proof coin sets. A total of 631,000 British 2 Pence coins were minted for the Mint Uncirculated coin sets. The "Mule" (2 New Pence instead of Two Pence) coins were included in sets packed by the Royal Mint for the "Martini and Heinz presentation sets", and not all sets included the "Mule" 2 Pence coin. No "Mule" coins were included in any of the Royal Mint sets. Nobody has ventured a specific quantity of coins that were minted, but rather the vague "some" or "a quantity". For want of a better answer, a number very significantly less than 631,000 of the 1983 "mule" 2 New Pence coins were minted.
Some British 1983 2 Pence coins were minted with the word "NEW" on them. The "NEW" had been dropped from the coins reverse design in 1982. These coins were only issued in some Royal Mint sets. The 1983 error or mule coin would look the same as all other 2 New Pence coins issued from 1971 to 1981, except with the year 1983.
One fifty pence and one five pence, one of them is not a five pence.
7 x 2 Pence coins and 1 x Penny.
120 Pounds is equal to 12,000 Pence. 12,000 Pence divided by 2 Pence = 6,000 x 2 Pence coins.
200 Pounds is equal to 20,000 Pence. 20,000 Pence divided by 2 Pence = 10,000 x 2 Pence coins.
Unless they are in mint condition, none of them have any significant value, and even then it would not be much. All years of issue of the 1 and 2 Pence coins are still potentially in circulation, so are worth 1 and 2 Pence respectively. The decimal New Half Penny and Half Penny coins were last issued for circulation in 1983 and were withdrawn from circulation and demonetised in December 1984. The larger pre-1991 5 Pence coins were withdrawn from circulation and demonetised in 1991. The larger pre-1993 10 Pence coins were withdrawn from circulation and demonetised in 1993. The larger pre-1998 50 Pence coins were withdrawn from circulation and demonetised in 1998. These coins have little or no value. Coins dated after the dates above, are worth whatever is inscribed on them.
A 20 pence and a 5 pence. One of them is not a 5 pence.
if you are pertaining to a £2 coin with the queen wearing a neck letno there are no valuable £2 coinsits an urban myth
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.