P- Philladelphia (still operating)
D- Denver (still operating)
S- San Francisco (still operating, but only for Proof coins)
W- West Point (still operating, but only for gold and silver bullion coins)
CC- Carson City
O- New Orleans
C- Charlotte
D- Dahlonega (gold coins only, 1838-1861) Plain- ??
MS stands for Mint State, which indicates a coin that has never been circulated and is in uncirculated condition. PL stands for Proof-like, referring to coins with reflective surfaces similar to proof coins. DMPL stands for Deep Mirror Proof-like, representing coins with highly reflective surfaces that closely resemble proof coins.
The prefix for "all" that is 3 letters is "pan."
There are 56 letters in the Telugu alphabet.
One sentence using all the letters in "these letters" could be: "Settle these letters on the shelf for later use."
Using all capital letters for a name is called "acronym."
Each nationality has different letters on their coins. What they mean is particlular to that country.
The letters tell you what city the coin was produced in.
They are the initials of the designer of the coin, such as JF on Washington quarters for John Flanagan, Roosevelt dimes have JS for John Sinnock. Most all coins have this.
If you mean a "Mintmark"? They are small letters ( O, S, CC & D) on the reverse of the coins.
What on earth is that supposed to mean? Dyslexic kids can wright all letters!
K
They do - the dates are in Hebrew letters.
A mintmark is one or two small letters located on the coin that indicates where the coin was made. The location varies. From 1968 to date, coins made for everyday use have the mintmarks ( D= Denver & S= San Francisco) on the front. coins before 1968 have them on the reverse of the coins. In 1979 The "P" mintmark was used on the Susan B. Anthony dollar and all other coins starting in 1980 except the Lincoln cent. You don't say what coin you see the letters BP on. The monogram of Bela Lyon Pratt "BLP" appear in the truncation of the Quarter & Half Eagle gold coins that he designed.
What do you mean by "What is the new coins?"
There are thousands of coins in the US, but if you mean circulation coins, there is the penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, Native American dollar, and presidential dollar.
Nothing, really.
A mint mark on any coin is a small letter or letters that indicate where a coin was struck. Not all coins have mint marks - for example all cents made in Philadelphia, and other coins struck there before 1980 do not have them, but other coins dated 1980 and later have a P mint mark. Other marks are S for San Francisco, D for Denver, W for West Point (on collectors' coins only); there were still other letters used in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Other countries don't necessarily use mnemonic letters. Germany, for instance, uses letters that are assigned in the order that the mint was established. Berlin was the first mint, so it uses A, not B!