You have a 1-ruble coin from the former Soviet Union, but without a date it's not possible to give a value.
The lettering is in the Russian Cyrillic alphabet; "CCCP" transliterates to "USSR" using the equivalent English words, and the denomination is actually "рубль" in Cyrillic letters (р = 'r', у = 'u', б = 'b', л = 'l', 'ь' = modifier indicating a soft consonant)
You cannot tell from the Serial number. You must look at the frame. There will be a logo (star with an arrow for tula arsenal, hammer and sickle in a wreath for izshevsk). The date will be right below this.
Those letters spell wreath.
Those letters can be used to spell "wreath".
These letters can form:aareaweawareearerarawwarwarewewear
In the word "wreath," the silent letter is "w." It is not pronounced, so the word is spoken as "reath." This phenomenon is common in English, where certain letters are silent in specific words.
Mintmarks (if any) are on the reverse of the coin between the wreath and the letters DO in dollar.
The silent letter in the word "wreath" is the letter "w." In this case, the "w" is not pronounced, making the word sound like "reath." This phenomenon is common in English, where certain letters are not vocalized in specific words.
Wreath is a noun.
The answer is wreath
is a wreath the thing that is green on doors
a funeral wreath is a Corona
Cunúnă is a Romanian equivalent of 'wreath'.