Numbers on a coin usually signify the year it was minted.
For a coin it is just worth the value stamped on it i.e. the value on it's face So a common coin is worth face value, but a rare coin is worth more than face value.
The serial numbers on the back of a watch are there for the customer to know that the watch is real. The serial numbers can be looked up at the retailers.
From what I understand some jewelers stamped in the ring size!
MOCCLXXVI are roman numbers, in Arabic numbers it's 666
What no they mean
It means that somebody defaced the coin, and will reduce the coin's collector value. Dan
It means the coin was not issued by the U.S. Mint and is just a copy having no monetary value.
Face value The value stamped on it
Usually caliber and/or serial numbers.
They are most likely a manufacturers mark or perhaps a product serial number or sorts.
That number indicates the fineness or purity of the metal content. 900 means the coin is 90% of that metal.
Numbers stamped on figurines are usually identification numbers. Most manufactures of ceramics or pottery keep records of these numbers as a mean of identification and production. They may also identify the artisan responsible for the work in some instances.
i think that its just storage numbers that they use at stores
They are codes from the canning and the date when the item expires.
I don’t know
Do you mean a quarter DOLLAR? Quarter eagles were not issued in 1968. And could you describe "double 'stamped"" ? (note the term is actually "struck" in coin jargon).
I think it means large? Maybe.