There are far too many of them to list here.
They are "Proof piedfort in silver FDC" and will most commonly be the One, Two and Five Pound coins with the occasional 50, 25 and 20 Pence coin.
They are not rare, they are nonexistent. The Royal Mint did not mint any 1990, 1991 or 1992 Piedfort silver Proof One Pound coins. In years when Piedfort coins are minted, the Royal Mint only produces quantities they think they can sell. There is not a huge market for non-circulating legal tender coins of relatively large cost, and quantities of 5,000 to 15,000 Piedfort coins of any given denomination are what is most commonly produced.
The Royal Mint is currently selling the Two Pound Olympic Handover coins as follows - The UK London 2012 Handover to Rio Commemorative cupro-nickel/nickel-brass £2 coin for £9.99 GBP. The UK London 2012 Handover to Rio Commemorative sterling silver Proof piedfort £2 coin for £75.00 GBP. The UK London 2012 Handover to Rio 22 carat gold Proof £2 coin for £1,195.00 GBP. Get in quick for the gold coins, there were only 1,200 minted.
Coins in the UK are manufactured by the Royal Mint.
no. UK have coins with 5 and 7 sides
The notes and coins are difference meaning meaning there money and a similarity is that they use noted and coins like the UK
list out the operating frequency of mobiles in the UK list out the operating frequency of mobiles in the UK
See this link.
Queen Elizabeth II is on all modern British coins.
Assuming US coins: -- 3 dollar coins -- 2 dimes -- 1 quarter
I doubt that there would be a comprehensive on line listing, for that sort of detail you really need one of the up-market coin catalogues. A local coin dealer should have a varied stock and maybe even some superceded issues a little cheaper. Alternatively, try your local library.
Please see the Related Link for a list of production costs. UK money (Pound sterling) costs around £150 to make £50 in £2 coins.
LEONES