PHRASE, not "phase"
E Pluribus Unum, not "pluribus unum"
The words mean "Out of many, one" and appear on ALL American coins.
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The Latin phrase E-PLURIBUS-UNUM is the national motto, not the type or name of any U.S. coin and CAN NOT be used to identify a coin. Post a new question and include the denomination of the coin.
The Latin phrase E-PLURIBUS-UNUM is the national motto, NOT a type of coin. This coin is a Eisenhower dollar and will likely be worth the same in 2017 as it is today, one dollar.
Copper-nickel, not silver E Pluribus Unum, not "You Pluribus Unum" Your coin has a V on it because V is the Roman numeral for 5, so you have a 5-cent piece. See the Related Question for more details.
The Latin phrase E-PLURIBUS-UNUM is the national motto, NOT a type of coin. This coin is a Eisenhower dollar (1971-1978) none of the coins made for and released into circulation contain any silver and are just face value.
It's the national motto. It's a Latin phrase meaning "out of many, one."