Other than for very minor differences, all British Halfpennies minted from 1911 to 1925 should be almost identical.
See the link below.
A 1932 British Halfpenny is the same design as all British Halfpennies issued from 1928 to 1936. The Halfpenny is made from bronze, is 26 mm in diameter and weighs 5.658 grams. The obverse has a left facing King George V with beard and moustache with the words - "GEORGIVS V DEI GRA BRITT REX FID DEF IND IMP" which is mostly abbreviated from Latin. The literal definition is - "George V by the Grace of God, King of the British territories, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India". The reverse has the seated female warrior Britannia wearing a helmet, carrying a trident and shield, who is personifying Great Britain. There may be minor differences to the figure of Britannia over successive years. The words HALF PENNY and the year also appear on the reverse. See the link below for a picture of a 1932 Halfpenny.
Most 1935 georgivs v del grs Britt coins are worth anywhere from $1-$10. These are rare half pennies. However, there are some collectible 1935 georgivs v del grs coins that can be worth upwards of $2000.
The coin could have come from many of the then, British Empire countries. If the coin has no country name on it, it is most likely British.
I have one. You tell me.
The life of someone who earned it
"GEORGIVS V DEI GRA BRITT" is the start of the motto "GEORGIVS V DEI GRA BRITT OMN REX FID DEF IND IMP", which is in turn abbreviated Latin for "George the Fifth, By the Grace of God, King of All Britain, Defender of the Faith and Emperor of India". This full motto is found on British coins issued in 1918, and variants of it are found on the coins of several British colonies and Commonwealth nations of the time. However, Britain in 1918 had no coins whose denomination was 25 anything, and none of the other nations that had 25 Cent coins in 1918 used that motto (Canada was close, but their motto read "GEORGIVS V DEI GRA REX ET IND IMP" ("George the Fifth, By the Grace of God, King and Emperor of India").
King George V wasn't on any coins until 1911.
that is worth about $50,000
If it has both George V and the year 1900, it is a very poor fake. George V did not appear on British coins until 1911.
It means .50 in U.S. coin
Britt McKillip was born on January 18, 1991, in British Columbia, Canada.
I am unaware of any British Empire country that uses the Peso as its currency. The inscription is Latin, but abbreviated. The expression "GEORGIVS V" identifies the reigning Monarch of the period, in this case, King George V. It does not identify the country or the denomination of the coin. "DEI GRA BRITT OMN REX FID DEF IND IMP" means "By the Grace of God, King of all the British territories, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India".