in god we trust
The FS are the initials of Felix Schlag, who designed the coin. Those letters are on every Jefferson nickel from 1966 to 2004. Every single coin in that time frame is worth 5 cents.
A coin.
The Obverse
The side with a head on it.
The probability of tossing a coin and getting heads is 0.5
A coin has a head and a tail but no body!
28 times out of 50 as a percent is achieved thus (28/50)*100 = 56% (The coin would appear to be biased by the way).
A coin.
Please check your coin again and post a new question with its denomination. To clear things up There are Liberty Head designs and Walking Liberty designs, but there couldn't be a coin with a "walking liberty head" because heads can't walk, LOL! And in any case, the Walking Liberty design didn't appear until 1916, on half dollars.
A coin
Her Majesty Elizabeth II is the Queen of Canada and the Canadian head of State.As such, every coin minted since Her Majesty's ascension to the throne has featured the Queen's image.
On a British coin the letters FD appear on the same side of the coin as the head of the monarch. They stand for Fidei Defensor (Latin for "defender of the faith') a title bestowed on King Henry VIII by the then Pole. The title has since been used by all British monarchs.
Coin tosses are independent events. The probability of a head remains 1/2
Please check your coin again and post a new, separate question. The first US nickels were made in 1866 and Liberty Head nickels didn't appear until 1883.
a coin has two faces the head- with the faceand what is commonly accepted as tails- the back
The FS are the initials of Felix Schlag, who designed the coin. Those letters are on every Jefferson nickel from 1966 to 2004. Every single coin in that time frame is worth 5 cents.
Head it called a head