Actually that motto is on all US Coins. It means "From many, One" and refers to the fact that the US is a single country made up of many states, people, and cultures.
All US coins dated 1804 except the Cent & Half-Cent have the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM, more information is needed.
E Pluribus Unum roughly translates to "Out of many, one"
PHRASE, not "phase"E Pluribus Unum, not "pluribus unum"The words mean "Out of many, one" and appear on ALL American coins.
The motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all modern US coins, this coin is a 2009 Lincoln Bicentennial cent and likely only face value.
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin of any type. Because the national motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all most every US coin ever made.
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin, all 2008 US coins have this motto.
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin of any type. Because the national motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all most every US coin ever made.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.