It's on the back, above the V, below the words "States Of." If the coin is heavily worn, the wording might not be legible anymore.
A 2010 U.S. nickel is worth exactly five cents.
US cents: In God We Trust, One Cent, Liberty, United States of America, E Pluribus UnumBritish pennies: 1 New Penny, Elizabeth II D.G. Reg. F.D.
5 cents
It is worth 5 cents.
The Liberty nickel was not made in 1945. In 1945 there was a silver nickel and that is worth 25 cents.
Scott #1354. This stamp was issued in 1968. It was part of a ten stamp set printed on single sheets. A mint copy can be purchased online for $1. A used copy is 65 cents.
It's a coaster, not a coin. You can buy these for a few dollars in gift shops. They also have copies of nickels, 1877 Indian head cents, and more. Also note that Lincoln cents are not "Liberty" cents. The last Liberty cents were large cents minted in 1857.
With the exception of cents, dimes and gold coins. All U.S. coins dated 1896 have the national motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM on them. Post new question with a denomination.
Uh.... NO American coins say "100 cents" on them. And ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them. So please go back and look at what you have and post a new, separate question with enough details to ID the coin.
Every Lincoln cent ever made has the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM and it adds nothing to the value. But 2010 Lincoln cents are hard to find in circulation right now so it may be worth 50 cents to someone who wants it.
"E Pluribus Unum" is latin for "Out of many, One" and is the legend found on all US coins since the early 1800's. To value your coin, the denomination (e.g., one cent, five cents, ten cents, etc.) and condition would need to be known.
3 cents!1 lol i think