The word "LIBERTY" is on the 1947 Washington quarter. This word wore badly on these quarters so if your coin is heavily worn then the word "LIBERTY" has just been worn off.
How you say liberty in French is: la liberté.
Until 1909 when the penny was changed to feature Lincoln, all US coins featured a personification of liberty (or a non-person design such as on the shield nickel and 2 cent piece). Because of this, the tradition stuck with putting Liberty on coins even though they don't feature a personification of liberty like the earlier coins.
Freiheit=liberty
Liberty - Sa'olotoga.
Liberty coins are coins that feature a personification of Liberty, NOT coins that just say "LIBERTY" somewhere on them. Liberty coins include the Standing Liberty Quarter (1916-1930), the Morgan Dollar (1878-1921) the Peace Dollar (1921-1935) and many other early US coins. Without knowing what years/mintmarks/condition your coins are in it is impossible to assign them values.
In French, you would say "cinq heures et quart" to say quarter to six.
From the date 1943. If you look on the back of the coin it will say 50 cents not a dollar. The coin is a Walking Liberty Half Dollar, most circulated examples from 1940 to 1947 are valued for the silver content only at about $11.00 Uncirculated coins can be $25.00 or more.
Liberty in Swahili is "uhuru".
She was born in Richmond, Virginia on March 9 1980 It doesnt say the year exactly but in an interview she said she was 12 in 1992
You didn't say what mintmark but a 1854 seated Liberty quarter is worth this: Good-4: $20.00 Very Good-8: $25.00 Fine-12: $35.00 Very fine-20: $45.00 Extra Fine-40: $85.00 Almost Uncirculated-50: $225.00 Mint State-60: $500.00 There is an error where the O mint mark is larger than usual.
U.S. coins will also say "United States of America," "Liberty," "E Pluribus Unum," and the coin's denomination, such as "quarter dollar."
Please be more specific. The Liberty head design was used on nickels, dimes, quarters, halves, dollars, quarter-eagles, half-eagles, eagles, and double eagles. All I can say is that you don't have a nickel because they weren't minted in New Orleans.