D is Denver, P is Philadelphia.
There were 372,000,000 2004-D and 361,440,000 2004-P Peace Medal nickels minted. There were also 344,880,000 2004-D and 366,720,000 2004-P keelboat design nickels minted.
p d p d
Omega Phi delta are letters inthe greek alphabet. they are letters "O", "P", and "D"...for Omega Phi Delta Fraternity & Sorority founded in 1990 at the University of San Carlos, aside from the greek letters it also stands for O-rder, P-eace, D-ecency.
POEM
The letters X and P are actually the GREEK letter CHI and RHO which are the first letters of CHRist's name
Play Station Portable. The letters P.S.P stand for Plastation station portable
Words that can be made from the letters 'shpdipey' are:adiedipdishdyehappyheheyhihidhidehiehiphishypeIididesispeppipiepiedpippipesheshedshiedshipshippedshysidesipsipespedspiedspyyeyesyesyipyipe
In WWII, The United States had to use 56% Copper, 35% Silver, and 9% Manganese. The dates for these 35% silver nickels are 1942(P,S) (NOT D), 1943(P,D,S), 1944(P,D,S), and 1945(P,D,S). The mint marks on these coins are located above the dome of Monticello. Contrary to popular misunderstanding, these are the only US nickels that ever contained silver. The rest are all made of an alloy of 25% nickel and 75% copper.
None of those letters appear to be mint marks. Mint marks are always capital letters and the only double-letter mark is CC, used in the 19th century for Carson City. The only current circulating marks are P for Philadelphia, D for Denver, and (only on some older cents and nickels) S for San Francisco.
Possibly the letters with no lines of symmetry.
"D" indicates the coin was minted at the Denver Mint. "P" stands for Philadelphia, and "S" for San Francisco. Nickels made in Philadelphia from 1866 to late 1942 and from 1946 to 1979 don't have a "P". San Francisco minted nickels for circulation up till 1954, then again from 1968 to 1970. "S"-mint nickels are still made for inclusion in Proof Sets.
The letter you see is an "F" not a P or D. All Buffalo nickels have it. It's the initial of James Earle Fraser the designer of the coin.