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Assuming you mean a British shilling, about 10 cents or so. 1948 shillings have no silver and are very common.
The British Shilling has never been made from gold, and has always been made from silver. From 1920 onwards, the Shilling and all other British silver coins, were debased from Sterling silver (92.5%) to 50% silver.
No great collector value, especially since it is damaged. They were made from sterling silver (92.5%), so you may get the value of the silver.
A 1946 shilling from the UK contains 50% silver.
The predecimal British Shilling converted to 5 New Pence at the changeover to decimal currency.
A shilling is a British monetary coin and is not in the Bible.
A shilling in 1850 was approximatley £3.82
"Shilling" is a noun and refers to a silver or cupro-nickel coin used by many countries.
No
There were no 1990 British Two Pound coins minted.
The English Shilling coin was not introduced until about 1550.
A shilling was a coin in British currency until 1971. It's value at decimalisation was 5 new pence.