U.S. quarters have 119 reeds.
A quarter has 119 reeds.
There are 119 reeds.
There are 119 ridges on a U.S. mint quarter. Also called "reeds"
According to the US Treasury website (http://www.usmint.gov/about_the_mint/?flash=yes&action=coin_specifications) a quarter has 119 'reeds.'
There are 119 ridges - aka "reeds" - on a US quarter; its Canadian counterpart has 130 ridges.Additional snippetA US dime has 118 ridges - that's only one fewer ridge than the quarter.
A quarter has 119 reeds.
There are 119 reeds.
There are 119 ridges on a U.S. mint quarter. Also called "reeds"
U.S. quarters have 119 reeds on the edge.
According to the US Treasury website (http://www.usmint.gov/about_the_mint/?flash=yes&action=coin_specifications) a quarter has 119 'reeds.'
A quarter has 119 grooves, or reeds. The grooves are used as an anti-counterfeiting strategy.
There are 119 ridges - aka "reeds" - on a US quarter; its Canadian counterpart has 130 ridges.Additional snippetA US dime has 118 ridges - that's only one fewer ridge than the quarter.
it only has one reed but the have double-reeds
None. Whistles do not have reeds.
There are 118 reeds on a dime.
Zero. None. Trombones use no reeds.
Yes they were made of reeds and twigs.