Please check your pocket change. It's a common coin worth face value only.
The letters are actually FS and are not a mint mark. They're the monogram of Felix Schlag, the coin's designer. They're on ALL nickels dated 1965 and later, except for some of the Lewis and Clark coins that have different images.
The mint mark on a 1978 nickel would be between the date and the end of Jefferson's wig. If there's no mint mark, it was made in Philadelphia. (The P mint mark only appears on nickels dated 1942-45 and 1980-present)
A 1978 nickel with the mint mark "PS" is not a genuine mint mark from the U.S. Mint. It is likely a novelty or altered coin, so it would not hold any significant numismatic value beyond its face value of 5 cents.
No, tobacco is not a required ingredient for a hookah session. You can use herbal shisha, which is a tobacco-free alternative made from ingredients like sugar cane, mint, or fruit pulp. This allows individuals to enjoy hookah without the use of tobacco.
To kill a nicotine craving, you can try distracting yourself with a different activity, like going for a walk or doing deep breathing exercises. Chewing gum or sucking on a mint can also help. Drinking water or engaging in a mindful activity can help ride out the craving until it passes.
Three forms of chewing tobacco include loose leaf, plug, and twist. Loose leaf chewing tobacco is shredded tobacco leaves, while plug chewing tobacco is compressed into a brick-like shape. Twist chewing tobacco is twisted into a rope form before being consumed.
The first step is to seek professional help from a therapist or counselor who specializes in eating disorders. They can help address the underlying reasons for the behavior and provide coping strategies. Additionally, surrounding yourself with a support system of friends and family can help provide encouragement and accountability. Finally, practicing self-care activities such as mindfulness, relaxation techniques, or engaging in hobbies can help manage stress and anxiety that may contribute to the behavior.
Human acts are imputable to man so as to involve his responsibility, for the very reason that he puts them forth deliberatively and with self-determination. They are, moreover, not subject to physical laws which necessitate the agent, but to a law which lays the will under obligation without interfering with his freedom of choice. Besides, they are moral. For a moral act is one that is freely elicited with the knowledge of its conformity with or difformity from, the law of practical reason proximately and the law of God ultimately. But whenever an act is elicited with full deliberation, its relationship to the law of reason is adverted to. Hence human acts are either morally good or morally bad, and their goodness or badness is imputed to man. And as, in consequence, they are worthy of praise or blame, so man, who elicits them, is regarded as virtuous or wicked, innocent or guilty, deserving of reward or punishment. Upon the freedom of the human act, therefore, rest imputability and morality, man's moral character, his ability to pursue his ultimate end not of necessity and compulsion, but of his own will and choice; in a word, his entire dignity and preeminence in this visible universe. Example: Human acts- action that is guided by reasons or actions that can be limited. example: exercise to be physically fit, etc... Acts of man- instinctive; physiological. example: crying, falling in love, eating, etc...
i have one
The value of a Jefferson nickel with a p mint mark will vary depending on the year and the condition of the coin itself. A person should have the coin appraised for an accurate value.
The value would depend on the condition and date of the coin.
Check it again. By 1980, all U.S. nickels had mint marks. That said, a 1985 nickel is worth 5 cents.
It may be a little older but is very common, just face value.
The U.S. Mint has never used a "T" mint mark. Examine your coin closely and then post a new question.
$2 to $9000 depending upon the mint mark and the condition of the coin.
The coin is still found in circulation and is face value
July 25, 2009 The value of a circulated Jefferson war nickel is based mainly upon the value of the silver they contain which is $0.78 today. In uncirculated collector coins the values vary greatly with the year and mint mark. To establish an estimated value for an uncirculated Jefferson war nickel, the year and mint mark must be known.
1976, Kennedy Bicentennial Half Dollar; with no mint mark, copper-nickel clad, uncirculated-$1.25 with D mint mark, copper-nickel clad, uncirculated-$1.25 with S mint mark, copper-nickel clad, proof-$1.75 with S mint mark, silver clad, uncirculated-$4.00, proof-$5.00There were so many hundreds of millions of these minted that if your coin has been in circulation, it has no added value and probably never will.
Just 5 cents
A date is needed. Please post a new and separate question.