No such coin is possible to exist. On modern mint equipment the obverse and reverse dies are "keyed" it is impossible to strike a coin using 2 reverse dies because the reverse die will not fit in both sides of the machinery. All 2 tailed quarters are privately made novelties worth only curiosity value.
That's more of a trick question than a real problem. The other coin IS a quarter.
Yes. If the discriminant (of a quadratic equation) is...Positive: There are two real roots.Zero: There is a single "double" root. ("Double" means that if you factor, you will have a repeated factor.)Negative: There are two complex roots (and no real roots).
There are 19 quarter hours in four and three quarter hours. To calculate this, you multiply the whole number (4) by 4 to get 16 quarter hours. Then, add the remaining three quarter hours to get a total of 19 quarter hours in four and three quarter hours.
if you mean .25 or 0.25, it would mean you have quarter carat of real diamonds in the jewellery piece
The domain can be anything you like, from the whole of the real numbers to just a single value.
No. They're all privately-made novelty items. In fact, the Mint uses dies that are "keyed" so a tails-side die cannot be put into the heads side of a press, precisely to prevent anyone from creating a real double-sided coin. Please use this site's Search feature to look for the word DOUBLE and you'll find hundreds of similar questions. double-tailed quarter has been certified as a real mint error. See related link to the Coin World article.
It's not a real quarter. These were novelty items given out as promotional items.
Look at the date again. NO Washington quarter should have a date before 1932. Double headed and double tailed coins are called magician's coins and are made by machining and joining parts from two real quarters. They have no numismatic value but are sold by novelty shops for $5 - $10 and are available on eBay for $2 - $3.
The same as all other double-headed coins - nothing. It's a trick coin sold at novelty shops for a couple of bucks. It's not real and has no value to collectors.
The value of real estate depends primarily upon its location.
Many animals have tails, yes. They are real. Even dogs and cats have tails!
No. His real name is Miles Prower, a play on the phrase "Miles per hour". Sonic and his friends nicknamed him "Tails".
No real value beyond face unless proof. Some value added to 76 for obvious reasons.
Tails the Fox's real name is Miles Prower.
Some one probably has a pet fox named Tails but if you are talking about the video game Tails then I do not think he exists.
yes
Mermaids are not real so you can't get tails like a mermaid