A quarter has 119 reeds.
a quarter has 130 grooves.
There are 119 reeds.
A quarter has 119 grooves on its edge, a dime has one less groove
According to the U.S. Mint, a dime has 118 reeds (grooves).
You can tell a coin is silver by either looking at the edge and finding it a uniform silver color (with no darker colors) or by finding a dime, quarter, half dollar or dollar with a date from before 1965. They now make silver versions of the dime, quarter and half, but only in proof sets.
a quarter has 130 grooves.
There are 119 reeds.
A quarter has 119 grooves, or reeds. The grooves are used as an anti-counterfeiting strategy.
A quarter has 119 grooves on its edge, a dime has one less groove
There are 119 ridges on the United States quarter dollar. The ridges are there mostly for making sure the coins are properly used in coin operated machines.
It isn't. No 1969 quarters are silver. Silver quarters were only made in 1964 and before. All quarters from 1965-present are copper-nickel. There isn't even a 1969 commemorative quarter that was struck in silver. There is no possible way for it to be silver.
None.
reedim
There are no "grooves" on a British 1 Penny coin. The edge is not milled.
According to the U.S. Mint, a dime has 118 reeds (grooves).
According to the U.S. Mint, a dime has 118 reeds (grooves).
The Philadelphia Mint hasn't produced silver coinage for circulation since 1964. A 2003-P state quarter is worth 25 cents.