In the UK, the highest value coin in current wide circulation is the £2 coin.
The highest denomination general circulation coin currently in use in Britain is the Two Pound coin. The Five Pound (Crown) coin is legal tender, but they are not widely accepted due to a lack of familiarity with the coins.
The coin was struck at all 3 mints and is still in circulation, most are face value. The Philadelphia issue has a wide rim (near date) type that has a premium.
They do not see wide circulation.
The coin was struck at all 3 mints and is still in circulation, none contain any silver and most are just face value. The 1979 Philadelphia issue has a wide rim (near date) type that has a premium. Take it to a coin dealer, it may be worth a few dollars.
Wide receiver Lynn Swann.
The New York Times has a wide circulation. The circulation of the air in here is good.
"[They] would give twenty, forty, fifty, a hundred ducats apiece for his picture in little." The ducat was a coin, originally Venetian but after minted in many parts of Europe which had wide circulation and was currency in most European countries in Shakespeare's day.
No one keeps an exact count of coins in circulation because their usage is too wide and too diffuse. However, the U.S. Mint does provide figures for how many coins are minted each year, but those numbers don't account for how many older coins are lost, stolen, melted, exported, etc., which of course reduces the total in circulation.
2.7 mm
None of the Eisenhower dollars regardless of date or mintmark struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums. If the coin has a "S" mintmark it is 40% silver with a retail value of about $5.00
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1845 Quarter Eagle is the most available issue of the 1840s, current retail values are wide at $180.00- $720.00 depending on the actual grade of the coin.
One- and two-dollar Canadian coins are in wide circulation and can be found anywhere in Canada, and may be available at the exchange counter of your local bank. There is no five-dollar Canadian coin in circulation. If there is one, it is actually not currency, but either bullion or jewelry, and can be purchased through the Canadian Mint.