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The coin you are describing is a Swedish 10 kronor coin minted in 1999. It features a portrait of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden on one side and the inscription "För Sverige i tiden" along with the denomination "10 kronor" on the other side. The collector's value of such a coin can vary depending on its condition and rarity.
It is *i* tiden - the motto of the current king Carl XVI Gustaf, "For Sweden - With the times".
only high denomination coins 100 Kronor 200 Kronor 300 Kronor also 50 Kronor in 1975 only
It is illegal for a private person to sale those kinds of weapons in Sweden.
"Sverige" is Sweden, in Swedish. 1 K is the denomination, i.e. 1 Swedish crown. The motto translates as "For Sweden Today" It's an ordinary circulation coin. At current exchange rates 1 crown is about 16 cents.
0.12 USD I found this coin in my car a while ago and would like to know a little about it. where did it come from, how did it get here and how much is it worth?
it sounds like a normal swedish coin, the value is then 0.1 euro. if it is a coin admitted when the king was married , celebration coin, then more. coins before 1977? , contains a lot of silver.
0.14 US dollars
"Sverige" is Swedish for, well, Sweden. Anything with that new a date on it is a common circulation coin worth face value only. Sweden uses the Swedish crown (SEK) as its currency pending adoption of the euro. In Swedish one crown is "en krona", the plural is "kronor". There is also a half-crown coin denominated as 50 öre. Exchange rates change all the time but the crown has been worth 12 to 14 US cents for the last few years so that's probably sufficient for valuing your coin.
At the moment 1 Swedish Krona is worth about 0.13 dollars.
It's an ordinary circulation coin from Sweden. The motto translates as "King Carl XVI Gustaf, For Sweden Today" You didn't give its denomination but the most expensive circulation coin is 10 kr, or about $1.50 U.S. so that's the most it could be worth.
Sweden