Yes, you can. If you have a large silver dollar don't use it. These are worth around $32. Smaller silver dollars such as Susan B. Anthony dollars are the ones you want to spend. Any Presidential gold dollars, Sacajawea dollars, and Eisenhower dollars are also legal to spend.
I would pay a dollar for a dollar, after all, it is only a dollar.
Depends on what you want to know for. Some collectors will pay more than the $15 you could get for the silver content. Technically the silver dollar is worth about $30, but not many will pay that much. Might be an anomaly on it somewhere which raises value. If you're talking about the Kennedy half dollar, it is worth half as much for the silver value, maybe 3/4ths of the silver dollar. Not worth much to a collector.
An 1879 "Silver Dollar" is a Morgan dollar.
It is not a dollar but it is a silver coin. Find it in the pay phones to the far left, past Charlie's house.
go to a coin dealer or the bank. The coin dealer will pay more. the bank will only pay face value.
Depending on condition, a dollar or so. Less if it's worn.
A Morgan 1882 Silver Dollar has 0.7735 of an ounce of silver.
No, a silver dollar does not equal a half dollar. Instead, in the USA it equals a full dollar.
The coin is a Susan B. Anthony dollar and has no silver in it, it's just a dollar coin.
The Morgan Silver Dollar can range from $25 to $70, and the Peace Silver Dollar from $50 to $300.
There is 24 grams of silver in a 1891 US silver dollar.
If it is a "S" mintmark Eisenhower dollar, it's 40% silver, if not, no silver.