the canadian twoonie is worth 2 dollars and has a polar bear on it
A twoonie is called a twoonie because it's a tip-off from the loonie. The Canadian loonie is one dollar, so the two-dollar coin thus became so-named as the twoonie.
1996
The Polar Bear, and on the other side is Queen Elizabeth.
No. A Twoonie only has one adult polar bear on the "tails" part of this coin.
Its a Twoonie + Loonie + Quarter + Nickel - Penny, They are trying to say their special only costs $3.29 . 2 + 1 + 0.25 + 0.05 - 0.01 = 3.29
The twoonie is worth $2. It's not particularily old and still in circulation. dg Regina inscription doesn't add to the value, it's a standard inscription.
It is no longer in circulation so it'd be worth A twoonie (2 bucks) or variant on it's age, contact a currency buyer or collector to have it appraised. Check eBay also.
Our paper money is called bills or dollars. The one and two bills were replaced by coins. The one dollar coin is called a loonie after the common loon engraved on its reverse side. When the 2 dollar coin came along it was already being dubbed the twoonie. the other coins are pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters.
Alaska's coinage is the same as in the lower 48 states and in Hawaii. Canada is the nation that has a bear on the twoonie coin--a polar bear, to be exact. Why the polar bear was chosen to be on that coin instead of other symbols or animals--like the moose, for instance--was likely because the bear signifies strength as part of the Canadian national anthem, "...strong and free."
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 10 words with the pattern -W---I-. That is, seven letter words with 2nd letter W and 6th letter I. In alphabetical order, they are: swabbie swaddie swaggie swankie swannie sweetie swiftie tweenie twinkie twoonie
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 3 words with the pattern -W--NI-. That is, seven letter words with 2nd letter W and 5th letter N and 6th letter I. In alphabetical order, they are: swannie tweenie twoonie