Please post a new question with the coin's denomination.
Nearly ALL U.S. coins carry that motto so it's not enough to make a specific identification.
A denomination is needed.
E-PLURIBUS-UNUM is not the name or type of ANY coin. It's a national motto. Post new question and include the denomination.
Circulated coins are $17.00 to $30.00 and it's a Morgan dollar not an E PLURIBUS UNUM coin.
A denomination is needed, post new question. silver dollar piece
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The value would depend upon the year it was minted, the denomination and the condition of the coin. Values vary greatly.
A denomination is needed.
Please be more specific
E-PLURIBUS-UNUM is not the name or type of ANY coin. It's a national motto. Post new question and include the denomination.
Circulated coins are $17.00 to $30.00 and it's a Morgan dollar not an E PLURIBUS UNUM coin.
E Pluribus Unum does NOT identify a coin. Post a new question and include the country of origin, denomination, and date.
A denomination is needed, post new question. silver dollar piece
5 cents
A five cent coin from 2005 is worth five cents.
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Include the coin's denomination and try again.
Please take a look at your pocket change. Every single U.S. coin has the motto E Pluribus Unum on it so that doesn't help to ID anything. Post a new question with the coin's denomination, and if you can locate the mint mark, that as well. On coins from 1881 it will be a small O, S, or CC on the reverse side. However the Philadelphia Mint didn't use a letter back then, so your coin may not have a mint mark at all.