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It means we trust God. The motto was first used on 2¢ pieces in 1864. However it was not put on the 1¢ coin until 1909 when the current Lincoln obverse was introduced.
The phrase in god 'you' trust has never appeared on any U.S. coin. It's IN GOD WE TRUST. This motto first was used on the 1864 Two-Cent piece, only from 1938 it's been on all coins. The only 4 word phrase used on every U.S. coin from 1793 to 2011 is UNTIED STATES of AMERICA.
The hole was used to tie a string in order to recover the coin once the coin was used in a vending machine .
E pluribus unum is Latin for "from many, one", used as the U.S. motto until "In God We Trust" was officially adopted in 1956 (possibly as a reaction to the godless Commies).
FR2 is sometimes used to denote the grade of a coin. FR2 would mean Fair 2.
ficha meaning token which is used instead of a coin
It seems like the coin contains Latin words that say "In fidens non movetur," which translates to "It does not move with trust." The numbers 1640 likely indicate the year the coin was minted.
"PL" in coin grading means "prooflike". It is used to describe a coin that has mirror fields and fine details resembling a proof struck coin but is not a true proof.
PR is a grading system used for proof coins
the word WITH can be used instead of inclusive
If may be used to mean provided that in some clauses, but never instead of provided.