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He could have won a Honda Civic, but could not solve the puzzle
Yes. It's on the front of all Native American dollars, and on the front of all Presidential dollars issued starting in 2009. During 2007 and 2008 it was on the edge of the Presidential coins along with the year and 'e pluribus unum'.
Benicassim Festival 2009 - 2009 - TV was released on: USA: 2009
The Haunting in Connecticut - 2009 was released on: Canada: 27 March 2009 Ireland: 27 March 2009 UK: 27 March 2009 USA: 27 March 2009 Netherlands: 16 April 2009 (Imagine Film Festival) Brazil: 17 April 2009 Mexico: 17 April 2009 Philippines: 22 April 2009 Thailand: 23 April 2009 Sweden: 24 April 2009 Netherlands: 30 April 2009 Latvia: 8 May 2009 Taiwan: 15 May 2009 Kuwait: 4 June 2009 Russia: 4 June 2009 Denmark: 12 June 2009 Turkey: 12 June 2009 Hong Kong: 18 June 2009 Poland: 19 June 2009 Estonia: 24 June 2009 Kazakhstan: 25 June 2009 Finland: 26 June 2009 Norway: 26 June 2009 Germany: 2 July 2009 Singapore: 9 July 2009 Lithuania: 10 July 2009 Portugal: 23 July 2009 Peru: 29 July 2009 South Korea: 30 July 2009 Belgium: 5 August 2009 Spain: 7 August 2009 Argentina: 20 August 2009 Italy: 21 August 2009 Hungary: 10 September 2009 Austria: 18 September 2009 Iceland: 25 September 2009 Greece: 26 November 2009 Japan: 22 January 2010 Australia: 4 March 2010 (DVD premiere) France: 1 June 2012 (DVD premiere)
Coraline - 2009 was released on: USA: 5 February 2009 (Portland International Film Festival) (premiere) Canada: 6 February 2009 Mexico: 6 February 2009 USA: 6 February 2009 Peru: 12 February 2009 Brazil: 13 February 2009 Portugal: 19 February 2009 Panama: 27 February 2009 Argentina: 12 March 2009 Hungary: 12 March 2009 Poland: 13 March 2009 Uruguay: 13 March 2009 Denmark: 20 April 2009 (CPHPIX Festival) Hong Kong: 30 April 2009 Kazakhstan: 30 April 2009 Russia: 30 April 2009 Ukraine: 30 April 2009 Ecuador: 1 May 2009 Romania: 1 May 2009 Kuwait: 7 May 2009 Ireland: 8 May 2009 Lithuania: 8 May 2009 Norway: 8 May 2009 South Africa: 8 May 2009 UK: 8 May 2009 Estonia: 13 May 2009 Netherlands: 13 May 2009 Lebanon: 14 May 2009 Slovenia: 14 May 2009 Sweden: 15 May 2009 Turkey: 15 May 2009 Bulgaria: 22 May 2009 Bulgaria: 22 May 2009 (3-D version) (limited) South Korea: 22 May 2009 Iceland: 27 May 2009 Greece: 28 May 2009 Egypt: 3 June 2009 Finland: 5 June 2009 Spain: 5 June 2009 Belgium: 10 June 2009 France: 10 June 2009 Switzerland: 10 June 2009 (French speaking region) Czech Republic: 11 June 2009 Denmark: 12 June 2009 Russia: 16 June 2009 (DVD premiere) Italy: 19 June 2009 Israel: 25 June 2009 Brazil: 21 July 2009 (DVD premiere) Australia: 6 August 2009 Germany: 13 August 2009 Austria: 14 August 2009 Switzerland: 27 August 2009 (German speaking region) Singapore: 29 October 2009 Japan: 19 February 2010
The coin doesn't read "50 koiieek", but rather "50 КОПЕЕК" (pronounced "kopek" in English) - the coin is from Russia (or its predecessor, the Soviet Union) and it is written in the cyrillic alphabet. (Pre-Soviet Russia also had coins denominated in kopeks, but the spelling in Russian was different.) The coin's numismatic value depends - the 50 kopek coins issued by the Soviet Union between 1924 and 1991 could be worth between about 10 US cents and 70 US dollars, depending on year and condition, and a few of the proofs from the 1920's are valued at US$400-US$500; the more modern ones issued by Russia since 1997 are worth little more than a US dollar in Uncirculated condition, and face value in circulated condition. From a foreign exchange standpoint, only the Russian coins issued in or after 1997 have any value - as of February 9, 2011, there were about 29.4 roubles to the US dollar, so 50 kopeks is equal to a bit under 2 US cents. Note, finally, that the early Soviet 50 kopek coins (1924-1927) were 90% silver and contained 0.2893 troy ounces of the metal (worth, with silver at US$30.30 per troy ounce as of February 9, 2011, about US$8.76), but their numismatic value is almost certainly higher.
Around $1800 depending on condition. In July 2009 one sold on E-Bay for 1200 Euros.
I THINK SO THEY WILL BE SYRELY ISSUED IN THE YEAR 2009
August 18, 2009 The Jamestown 400th Anniversary Commemorative Coin was issued in silve and in gold. In silver the uncirculated value is about $35. In gold the uncirculated value is about $230.
Now that we have come to 2001, they will never be issued.
2009
The Royal Mint advises that 94,500,300 British 20 Pence coins were issued for 2009.
Yes, a patent issued in 2009 can certainly be used in court to collect damages from anyone who can be proven to be infringing the patent.
Both Proof & Uncirculated coins were issued, the current average retail value is the same at $29.00.
For new drivers a license issued in 2009 would expire in 2014 (5 years).
August 8, 2009 The One Fare School Token is from SEPTA (Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority). Used in Philadelphia there were 4 million of them issued in 1994 and have a current value of $1.25.
These banknotes were issued in 2009 and are still in circulation. Unless they are in absolute mint condition, they are worth $50 AUD.