A sweet girl who has blonde hair and bangs she is so nice u would love to meet here
Nobody knows that. It likely will still be just a dollar.
No, a silver dollar does not equal a half dollar. Instead, in the USA it equals a full dollar.
give the expansion of Taylor series
I would pay a dollar for a dollar, after all, it is only a dollar.
kumba has one dollar. He spent 1/2 of the dollar on a pencil and 2/10 of the dollar on an eraser. What fraction of the dollar did he spent?
The Taylor dollar was minted in 2009.
Yes. He is featured on a one dollar coin, part of the Presidential dollar coin series. Taylor's coin was minted in 2009.
one dollar
As the value written on the coin suggests, it's worth one dollar. It's part of the presidential dollar coin series. Taylor was the 12th President, and the coin was minted in 2009.
Nobody knows that. It likely will still be just a dollar.
Zachary Taylor
Type your answer here... well i dont know about Sean but Taylor lautner still lives with his parents
The coin is just a 2009 Presidential dollar. The dual date 1849-1850 is the term of office he served. Value is $1- it's made of brass, not gold.
The coin is just one of the newer (2009) Presidential dollar coins and it's John TYLER not Taylor. Spend it.
The coin is a 2009 one dollar coin. It has NO GOLD in it, the dates 1849-1850 are his term as president and the date, mintmark and motto are on the edge of the coin. It's just a dollar.
During President Zachary Taylor's administration (1849-1850), the currency used in the United States was the U.S. dollar, which was subdivided into cents. At that time, various forms of currency circulated, including gold and silver coins, as well as paper money issued by banks. The Coinage Act of 1792 established the dollar as the standard unit of money, and it remained in use throughout Taylor's presidency.
All Presidential Dollars have their dates and mint marks on the coins' edge. Those with a portrait of Zachary Taylor were minted in 2009. Remember that they're brass, not gold, and only worth $1.