Trust <In God We Trust>
Trust (in the motto "in God we trust").
liberty
No, as of yet there is no official word on the fate of US one cent coins.
The word "cleaner" (noun, adjective) is both British and US English. The noun "cleaner" (cleaners) has the US synonym "laundry."
Confidence. For example, you probably knew the answer to this one without having to ask us. If you had more confidence you would just have written the word "confidence" in your homework.
There are no US coins that I am aware of that have the word 'forever' on them. All that US coins have on them that remains constant is the word "Liberty" somewhere on the coin (though often times it is either incorporated in the personification of Liberty on older coins and is absent on presidential dollars due to the mint figuring that the State of Liberty on the reverse was enough), they have United States of America on them and they have E pluribus unum on them which translates from Latin to "out of many one".
Most all U.S. coins made from 1793 to 2012 has the word "Liberty" on them. Please, be more specific.
The US Mint produces circulating coins, commemorative coins, and bullion coins for the United States.
No, most US coins are not magnetic.
No, Cayman coins do not work in the US.
The word Liberty has been on all coins since 1792.
The best thing to do is click on images on you browser and type in US Coins, this will bring up pictures of US coins