The design on the back of the coin is the Canadian Coat of Arms.
I'd have to say no i mean I've seen tons of people wearing golden dollar necklaces so i'd say no.
Assuming you mean a €0.01 coin, face value only.
is change or coins One Cent i the coin, it's a hundred of an Euro, but it also means "hundred" in french.
LCW is the designer's initials.
It means that the coin is rare. For example a 1909-S VDB cent is a key date. This coin is rare.
"A penny" isn't an idiom - it's just a one-cent American coin.
"Loonie" is a slang term for the Canadian one-dollar coin. It gets its name from the image of a common loon, a bird native to Canada, that is featured on one side of the coin.
I assume that you mean the liberty head 5 cent coin, the term Indian head refers to the one cent coin of that era. Value is dependent upon the condition of the coin. A well worn coin may get you $4-$25, a coin with little wear up to $100 and a coin that is in mint condition with no wear and the original reflective surfaces may get as much as $200, but this is dependant upon many different factors.
It's the name of the original artist: Robert-Ralph Carmichael
If you mean a U.S. cent, $20 in very worn condition and $30 if moderately worn If you mean a British penny, around $20 in moderately worn condition.
HP stands for T.H. Paget, a British artist, whose design was used on Canadian coins.
The 5-cent has a beaver, the 25- cent has a caribou (NOT a moose), the 1-dollar shows a loon, and the 2-dollar features polar bears.