Skilling
I think this must be "skilling"
An ore is the smallest currency unit in various Scandinavian countries. The purchasing power of 1 ore is so small that the lowest denomination coins are either 50 or 100 ore. 100 ore is equivalent to 1 unit of the next larger denomination, called a crown.
All U.S. coins dated 1978 have the word LIBERTY on them. Post new question with the denomination.
Depends on the currency and the denomination of the coins
It depends on the denomination's of the 1903 coins? Are they cents? Quarters? Post new question
Germany uses the euro. Coins are 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, and 50 cents, and 1 and 2 euros. In common speech the lower-denomination coins are often called pfennige (pennies) because the pfennig was the smallest denomination prior to adoption of the euro. It's the same as the American and Canadian practice of calling cents "pennies" even though neither country has used penny-denominated coins in dozens of decades.
It isn't. The $50 dollar denomination is artificial. Gold buffalo coins are bullion coins whose price is based on the amount of gold they contain. However by law all US coins, even bullion coins, must carry a denomination. Because gold prices change daily, it's not possible to use a "real" denomination that reflects the coin's exact gold value. Instead, an arbitrary denomination is used based on the troy weight of each coin.
Depends on the denomination of coins that were used.
It depends on the denomination.
Today different colors are used to make it easier to identify coins that are similar in size but with different denominations. That practice is inherited from a time when coins had to be made of metal that was worth roughly the same as its denomination. For example, a US dollar contained about $1 worth of silver, a British pound contained about £1 worth of silver, etc. Copper was used for low-denomination coins because it's inexpensive, silver was used for intermediate-denomination coins, and gold was used for high-denomination coins. Today many countries imitate that pattern by using copper or copper-plating for low-value coins, silver-colored alloys for middle denominations, and gold-colored alloys for high-value coins.
No dollar coins were made after 1935, Please look at the coins denomination again.
The FACE value is the same as all other US coins set by the denomination.