All Farthings from this period are made from copper.
The 1825 Farthing obverse has a left facing George IV with the Latin inscription "GEORGIUS IIII" and "DEI GRATIA".
The reverse has a right facing seated Britannia holding a trident with her left hand and a shield with her right hand beneath her.
The date is below Britannia and the Latin inscription "BRITANNIAR REX FID DEF" is around the circumference.
See the link below for an image.
To a numismatist, FAIR condition describes a coin that is so worn you can barely determine the type and date, so if it is really in this condition, it is worth nothing. If it is in a bit better condition, it still has no significant value and may even be found in a dealer's "junk box" for 25 cents.
That depends on which coin, from where.
Please post a new and separate question. Pennies and farthings are old British coins but they're different. One farthing was a quarter of a penny - the name comes from old English and roughly meant a "fourth of a thing" (!) OTOH a "penny farthing" is a variety of bicycle ... yes, you can look it up.
ALL British coins have that inscription so it really doesn't help to ID a coin. Please look for the coin's denomination and post a new question. Old British coins have strange values so you may see words like shilling, florin, farthing, etc.
British uniforms were red and had a white cross on the front.
cuz, they look da same
Like a bullshitzu
A huge front wheel, with pedals at the hub, trailed by a much smaller rear wheel. The rider sat almost on top of the huge front wheel.
The same as it does now.
a lion
The inside of a British mortuary will look like a mortuary from anywhere else. It will have large well lit rooms that have tables and instruments used for performing autopsies.
All British Pennies from 1982 to 2008 look pretty much the same as the Penny shown at the link below.