Out of many, one.
it means out of many one
E pluribus unum, Latin for "Out of many, one",
What denomination?
value
400.00 dollars
$17.00-$26.00 and it's a Morgan Dollar NOT a E PLURIBUS UNUM dollar
E pluribus unum is Latin for "from many, one", used as the U.S. motto until "In God We Trust" was officially adopted in 1956 (possibly as a reaction to the godless Commies).
A denomination is needed. Post new question.
E PLURIBUS UNUM is NOT a type of silver dollar, it is the national motto. Please post a new question with the date of the coin.
All Nickels, Quarters, Half Dollars and Dollar US coins dated 1900 have the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM on them, a denomination is needed.
The US Mint struck no dollar coins dated 1830 of any type.
'E pluribus' is two words, not one. Translated from Latin, it means "out of many". This is most commonly found in the United States motto, E Pluribus Unum, which translates to "Out of many, one".
In 1962 the Denver Mint struck all denominations of circulating coins, they all have D's and the motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM. Post new question with better information.
Yes, it's worth money. How much money mainly depends on the coin's denomination, which you forgot to include in your question.