Miss Liberty, of course.
No, they are two different bands.
How HEAVY it is depends on how large a piece of nickel you have, so the appropriate question is how DENSE it is. The density of nickel is about 8.9 kilogram per liter - i.e., 8.9 times the density of water.
i think she is but if she is not then she is a king charls
No, Jenna Jameson is not in Nickel Back. She is a porn star and writer. Nickel Back is a popular rock band.
Depending on who makes them and their quality, they are made from either silver, nickel, or nickel-plated base metal.
Liberty Nickels The picture on the liberty or V nickel is Lady Liberty. See the pictures on eBay by typing in Liberty V nickel.
No, they are two different bands.
Except for the nickel all US coins dated 1879 have Lady Liberty on them, a denomination is needed.
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Uh, the "lady" is Miss Liberty. Also, if you remember Roman numerals from school, "V" is the symbol for 5 so "V Cents" means you have an old nickel called a Liberty Head nickel. Please check the coin's date and see the question "What is the value of a [date] US nickel?" for prices and other information.
1. STARS, not "starts" 2. Copper-nickel, not silver 3. Miss Liberty, not just any lady V is the Roman numeral for 5 so you have a nickel. There's more information at the Related Question.
NOTE: Not all US coins are "Lady Liberty's" It's a Liberty Head Nickel Only 5 1913 LIBERTY HEAD Nickels are known and each one is valued at more than 1 million dollars. All are accounted for but there are many counterfeits.
use the fan in the disco place so the lady will give you a nickel. give the nickel to the guy all the way to the left of the factory. he'll give you heat vision goggles.
The Liberty Nickel is a USA 5 cent coin which was minted from 1883 to 1912, bearing the image of Lady Liberty on the obverse [heads] side of the coin and a large letter "V" on the reverse [tails] side of he coin.
Yes, many thousands. Unfortunately this site doesn't allow embedded pictures but you can use the image-search feature of any major search engine to look for "1903 US nickel", with the quotes.To explain, the "lady" is Miss Liberty, and the "V" is the Roman numeral for 5, the coin's denomination.
To clear things up, the "lady" is Miss Liberty, and "V" is of course the Roman numeral for 5.However, the last Liberty Head nickels were struck for circulation in 1912 so your coin can't be dated 1981. If you meant 1891, please see the question "What is the value of an 1891 US nickel?" for more details.
Based on the description provided, the coin is likely a nickel worth 5 cents. The "V" refers to the Roman numeral for 5, while the lady's head is a representation of Thomas Jefferson, the 3rd President of the United States, who is featured on the nickel.