15 cents.
Mint US stamps are worth their face value to use as postage, so use yours that way, if you need postage. Otherwise, your stamp has negligible value ( less than 25 cent retail) , but please do not throw it away! Keep it in your stamp collection for your children or yourself when you have more time. If you have more than one, you may be able to trade it for stamps of similar value. . Or give it to a collector friend. Collectors always appreciate the thought even it they do not need the stamp. .
The new land of the free and the brave soldiers who fought for it.
The new land of the free and the brave soldiers who fought for it.
The land of the brave and the home of the free The land of the brave and the home of the free
Land of the Free Home of the Brave - album - was created in 1969.
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This is a very common US regular issue stamp. If you want to buy just one it will probably cost you from 10 to 25 cents at a stamp shop mint or used . If you want to order it by mail, you would have to pay postage and handling in addition. Dealers get them as part of larger lots for almost nothing per stamp- say 65% face if mint and 1/5 cent if used. It is the kind of stamp I use on letters if unused or give to kids if used.
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That's the LAND of the free. The line, from the song Star Spangled Banner is asking if the American flag is still flying over the US- the land of the free, home of the brave (people)
The land of the free, and the home of the brave.
A cent percent patriotism.
The word "brave" consists of one morpheme, which is the root morpheme "brave." A morpheme is the smallest unit of meaning in a language, and in this case, "brave" is a free morpheme, meaning it can stand alone as a word with its own meaning. There are no additional morphemes, such as prefixes or suffixes, attached to "brave" in this context.