It wouldn't look like anything because the last Morgan dollars were made in 1921. All dollars minted from December 1921 to 1935 are Peace dollars, and have a modernistic image of Miss Liberty on the front, while the back has an eagle with its wings folded and the word PEACE underneath.
On your browser type in "Morgan dollar" and click on images. This will bring up a lot of pics.
It isn't misspelled. It uses the V as a U like Latin did, this is not a mint error but rather an intentional design characteristic. As such, it is worth the same as any 1926 Peace Dollar and is worth about $22 at the time of writing depending on condition.
1879 would make it a "Morgan" dollar.
There is no such coin. Morgan dollars* were not issued until 1878. If you have a Liberty Seated dollar with that date, its value depends on its condition and mint mark: No mint mark - $400 if very worn, $1000 if moderately worn, $1600 if like new "O" mint mark - $250, $750, $1200 If you have a Morgan dollar with the date 1850 it is a counterfeit. (*) The coin is called a Morgan dollar after its designer. It carries the image of Miss Liberty, not the head of Mr. Morgan.
It's actually a real silver dollar called a Morgan dollar after its designer George Morgan. The "eagle" coins weren't issued until the 1980s and are bullion coins sold as investments and not for spending, but Morgan dollars were struck for use in ordinary commerce back in the days when silver was worth far less than it is now. You could get them at a bank and spend them like any other coin.
On your browser type in "Morgan dollar" and click on images. This will bring up a lot of pics.
There were no Trade Dollars made in 1882 with a CC mintmark -- must be a counterfeit. Either that or it's a Morgan Dollar, like the one in the picture here : http://www.coinfacts.com/silver_dollars/morgan_dollars/1882_morgan_dollars/1882cc_morgan_silver_dollar.htm In circulated condition, an 1882-CC Morgan Dollar is worth about $70.00
All Morgan dollars look the same, they just have different dates and mintmarks. On your browser type in "Morgan dollar" and click on images. This will bring up a lot of pics.
It looks like the coin in the related link:
the biggest is the dollar coin and like its name it's worth a dollar
1879 would make it a Morgan dollar, which has an eagle on the reverse.
"Morgan" isn't something like "kleenex" or "scotch tape" that once referred to a specific product. It describes a specific type of silver dollar, and is named for the artist George T. Morgan. Morgans were struck from 1878 to 1904 and again in 1921, so you could not have a 1923 Morgan dollar. All dollars struck that year are Peace dollars, again named for their design.