All 1962 cents were struck in bronze. Your coin has been exposed to heat or a chemical that affected its surface, and is only worth face value.
Gold has a yellow color, and brass has a yellow-ish color.erm I think gold is more brownish but maybe if it was polished really well, perhaps brass or copper and bronze or Muntz which contains copper and zinc.
Dark brown with natural bronze high lights
a light bronze tone or maybe even a light blue. Not too bright but not too light
Stone or maybe marble
It probably means he earned a Bronze Star Medal. The medal was awarded to the soldier in a case that included three items: A bronze Star Medal, a ribbon and maybe a metallic version of the ribbon. The Bronze Star Medal was a medal in the shape of a STAR that was bronze. It hung from a ribbon that was mainly RED with a BLUE and WHITE strip. If awarded to the soldier, the STAR would have his name engraved on the back. If the ribbon has an Oak Leaf device or a small Star device or a brass "V" attached to the ribbon, this denotes a special recognition for the award. The Oak Leaf represents a second award of the Medal. The "V" recognizes the soldier for Valor.
Assuming you mean, are the words "clean those brass" adjectives, the answer is no, maybe, and yes Clean is a verb. Those is a demonstrative pronoun. (Some people might call this a form of adjective, as it is a modifier.) Brass is an adjective: a brass trumpet, a brass bookend. Note that brass is also a noun in some uses: the brass on that uniform is shiny, the brass in this orchestra is very good
Learn some grammar and maybe people could answer your question.
green maybe??? green maybe???
Maybe iron, copper, gold, titanium, steel, bronze, etc
wood lol im joking maybe metal brass or wood
Maybe Maybe NOT
Red or maybe even a brownish color