You have a privately-made novelty item called a magician's coin. It sells for a couple of quid in a novelty shop, but has no value to a coin collector.
The value of a 10p coin from 1968 can vary depending on its condition, rarity, and demand among collectors. Generally, due to inflation, its purchasing power would be significantly lower today, but as a collectible item, it might be worth more than its face value, often ranging from a few pence to a couple of pounds. For an accurate valuation, consulting a numismatic expert or recent sales data is advisable.
15 cents
10p
In the 1950s people had pounds, shillings, pence and half pence. Now we have pounds, notes, 2 pound coins, 50p, 20p, 10p, 5p, 2p and 1p. Alot has changed!
depending on who you are talking about depends on what they use: ancient Egyptians: food and animals Old england: Crowns, half pennies, France: Cents, euros. Modern england: 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2, £5, £10, £20, £50
There are 100 pence in one pound. Therefore, to find out how many 10p coins are needed to make one pound, you would divide 100 by 10, which equals 10. So, you would need 10 10p coins to make one pound.
10p
10p
The one that is not a 10p is a 20p. The other coin is a 10p. The question/riddle does not say that neither coin is a 10p, only that one of them is not.
i had a coin like that at home and i put it on eBay, it raised about £100.
10p
10p
how much is a 10p1976 eire coin
If its from ireland, then its worth £5000, but other than that i dunno:P
20
5 dollars
the product of 10p (p–q) is 10p²-10pq Given: 10p (p–q) To find : the product of 10p (p–q) Solution: we have to find the product of 10p (p–q). so product of any number means the multiplication multiply (p–q). by 10p we get, =10p× (p–q) =10p×p-10p× q =10p²-10pq the product of 10p (p–q) is 10p²-10pq