Many countries issue (or used to issue) 1 cent and 2 cent coins. Please post a new question with the coins' country of origin and their dates.
"Cents" is the plural of "cent". This could be a little confusing, so pay attention. Referring to value, you can have 1 cent, 2 cents, 10 cents, 50 cents, etc. Example - apples are 1 cent each, oranges are 2 cents each. Referring to coins, you can have a 1 cent coin, a 5 cent coin, a 10 cent coin, etc. Example 1 - I have a 1 cent coin, a 2 cent coin and a 10 cent coin in my pocket. Example 2 - I have two 1 cent coins, three 2 cent coins and four 10 cent coins in my pocket. You are referring to the coins and describing them by their values.
Around 2 cents, due to copper content.
The value of a 1989 1-cent and 2-cent piece is typically quite low, often just their face value unless they are in uncirculated condition or have unique errors. A 1983 5-cent piece also generally holds its face value, but it can be worth more to collectors if it's in excellent condition or has a specific mint mark. Overall, unless these coins are in pristine condition or have rare features, they are not worth significantly more than their face value.
(25) 2 cent pieces
10 coins= 2 fifty cent coins.
Two cent pieces were minted from 1864 to 1873. Please check again and post a new question.
There is no such coin. Pennies (to use the common term) are worth 1 cent and there were two-cent pieces during the 19th century that were worth, well, 2 cents. They're not the same. A "2 cent penny" is like saying "a twenty-cent dime". If you have a 2-cent piece that's about the size of a quarter with a shield design on the front, please post a new question that includes its date and how worn it is. Those details are necessary to be able to estimate its value.
Two cent pieces were minted from 1864 to 1873. Please check again and post a new question.
Two cent pieces were minted from 1864 to 1873. Please check again and post a new question.
Two cent pieces were minted from 1864 to 1873. Please check again and post a new question.
Please check again and post a new question. Two cent pieces were only minted from 1864 to 1873.
3¢ U.S. FWIW, the coin is just a 2-cent piece. A penny is worth 1¢ so a "2-cent 1-cent" coin would be pretty odd.
All 3 cent pieces issued by the US Mint had dates. If yours is worn so the date is not on it anymore then you will have to be know whether it is a silver 3 cent or a nickel 3 cent. The nickel 3 cent is about the size of a dime and the silver 3 cent is smaller than a dime. Without a date the value of these coins would be about $1-$2 for the silver 3 cent and about 25-50 cents for the nickel 3 cent.
the value of one dollar is one hundred pennies 100 pennies, 20 nickels, 10 dimes, 4 quarters or 2 50 cent pieces. Or any combination that comes out to 100 cents.
The value of the year 1800 King George VI emperor 1 2 cent coin can vary as much as $55 to over $5000.
No such coin. A penny is one cent so a 2 cent penny does not exist. There are US Two- Cent pieces but a date is needed.
There's no such thing as a "2 cent Indian penny". There are Indian head cents (one cent) and there are 2 cent pieces, and they're completely separate. 2¢ coins have a shield design, not an Indian motif. If you have an Indian head cent with that date its retail value ranges from $7 in worn condition to $35 if almost new. If you have an 1865 2¢ piece the range is $16 to $47. (All prices retail, as of 11/2008)