Yes, I have one.
The US never made a "1 centavo filipinas" coin. The US makes cents not centavos. Mexico is one country that has used centavos. Try determining another country of origin.
Philippine centavos from the 1903 era are actually quite valuable considering their face value. An uncirculated 5 centavo could be worth up to $500. A circulated one could be worth as much as $25 to $50.
The value of a US dime marked "ten centavos" is zero, since it is a fake. A real US dime is marked "one dime," not "ten centavos."
First of all the US did not make 20 cents pieces in 1944. Also US coins do not say "Twenty centavos". So your coin is fake. Since it's fake it has no collector value. However if the coin is made of silver it has a silver value.
A centavo is literally 'one cent' so 100 centavos is one dollar
With a mintage of 58 million, this coin is considered common by collectors. In circulated condition it's worth about 10 cents. A nice uncirculated one is worth about a dollar.
Before 1946 the Philippines were a U.S. colony (or protectorate, if you prefer). Coins were minted in the U.S. bearing both names, usually matching their American counterparts in denomination (in centavos instead of cents, of course) and size. Many were made in Denver or San Francisco and bear a mint mark from one of those 2 facilities.
Philippine money is denominated in Pesos, and theoretically in centavos where there are 100 centavos in one peso. But the value of a peso is so small that centavos are not much used.
a Filipino 50 centavo coin, made back when us owned the Philippines
10 centavos
"Veinticinco" is Spanish for "Twenty five" and "centavos" is one hundredth of another unit, usually a "peso" (in much the same way that a "cent" is one hundredth of a "dollar").
One Colombian Peso = 100 Centavos.