i hate to say this, but unfortunatly is only 25 cents. Hint the word "Quarter" in it. There are 1.7 billion of them
CorrectionE Pluribus Unum (Out of Many, One) is the nation motto of the US and is found on ALL American coins and bills. That means all quarters have the motto, and calling one of them an "e pluribus unum quarter" isn't at all specific. You need to know the coin's design, date, and mint mark to ID it.Not at all.
The U.S motto is E pluribus unum
The U.S motto is E pluribus unum
the back of the quarter is the motto of the United States: E pluribus unum which means "From many, one"
This question is confusing. With a date of 1890, the coin would be a Liberty Seated quarter, but they do not have the motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM. Please take a closer look at the date and post new question.
Roughly translated E Pluribus Unum means, "out of many, one.
"E Pluribus Unum" is Latin for "Of many, one"
how much value does the lady liberty and past presdents with e pluribus unum on it
E Pluribus Unum roughly translates to "Out of many, one"
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin of any type. Because the national motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all most every US coin ever made.
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin of any type. Because the national motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all most every US coin ever made.
A lot of coins say E Pluribus Unum. If the date says 1776-1976, it's a bicentennial quarter, half dollar, or dollar. Whichever coin you have, it's worth face value.