At worst, it is legal tender in Britain and it is worth Five pounds.
The British decimal Five Pound coin is intended to be a Commemorative coin or for serious collectors or investors.
Any value above Five Pounds would depend on the condition of the coin, what it is made from, the year and possibly the design.
You do not state the nature of the misspelling.
The 2005 British Two Pound coin, 400th Anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot commemorative, should have -
"Elizabeth II DEI GRA REG FID DEF" on the obverse.
"1605 2005" and "TWO POUNDS" on the reverse.
The edge inscription should read "REMEMBER THE FIFTH OF NOVEMBER".
Any coin with a "genuine" minting flaw would have some value, above the usual, as a collectible coin.
Genuinely flawed coins are not necessarily known about or documented until somebody turns up with one, since they are an "accident" of the minting process, and have escaped detection during quality control at the mint therefore, a valuation cannot be anticipated.
A reputable coin dealer should be able to identify and confirm the coin as genuine and make a valuation.
That would be the 2005 British Two Pound coin commemorating the 400th Anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot.
The edge inscription should read "REMEMBER REMEMBER THE FIFTH OF NOVEMBER" but reads "PEMEMBER PEMEMBER THE FIFTH OF NOVEMBER".
These coins described as "rare" on eBay, do not seem to be generating much interest which is surprising since the Royal Mint does make many errors of the magnitude.
1 troy pound of silver is currently worth about $210.
One pound.
On the 19th November 08 £1 was worth 1.40 cuc
if you can get a mint one yes but most are tatty
a pound was worth 100 dollors
At least 6,000,000 but if you wait until November the prices of gold be reach 2,000 dollars a penny ounce which is per pound 640,000 dollars a pound
Depending on condition, a 1959 Bank of Scotland One Pound note might get anything from £5 to £20 GBP. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation based on inspection of the banknote.
A pound is always worth exactly 1 pound in England.
Depending on condition anything up to £150 or more...
The spot price of titanium is about $20 US per pound at the moment (December 2009). A ring isn't going to weigh anything near a pound, so as metal it might be worth a buck or two. As jewelery, what it's worth depends on the workmanship.
1.00 pound is worth 1.60 dollars
No, apparently not (although we do not have anything in his own handwriting) but in any event nobody would notice because nobody had good spelling back then. It's worth it to read the plays from the original texts to get an idea of how bad typesetters' spelling was.