Anonymous
The hole was used to tie a string in order to recover the coin once the coin was used in a vending machine .
If you mean a 1936 Indian Head nickel? The coin has NO silver and is very common with values of $1.00-$3.00 if it's in a collectible condition.
If you mean a 1890-S MORGAN dollar? It's a common coin. Circulated coins have retail values of $38.00-$50.00 depending on the grade of the coin. The Latin phrase E-PLURIBUS-UNUM is NOT a type or name of ANY U.S. coin. It's the national motto that appears one almost EVERY coin made by the United States.
No mint mark indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The first U.S. dollar was issued in 1794 so there can't be a 1776 silver dollar.If you have a large (38.1 mm) coin with a picture of President Eisenhower on the front, it's a dual date (1776-1976) Bicentennial commemorative. (After all, Ike was born in 1890 so there's no way his picture could be on a real 1776 coin!) If you have a Bicentennial coin please see the related question.The other possibility is that you have a privately-minted medal, token, or fantasy piece. Unless it contains silver, these have little collector value.The first US silver dollar was struck in 1794 not 1776 but if you mean a dual date 1776-1976 Eisenhower dollar the coin has face value only.
There is no such thing as an 1890 silver farthing, as there were no Victorian silver farthings ever made (the only silver farthings I'm aware of are those struck by hand in the 1100-1400s!). If you mean an 1890 farthing, they run about $1-2 in circulated condition and about $10 if in great shape. However, if your coin is silver looking, chances are it is plated and therefore considered to be damaged to coin collectors, putting your coin in the range of about $1-2 or so regardless of condition.
If that is a private mint coin, it is probably the weight of the coin.
A coin layered in .999 pure silver means that the coin's surface has been covered with a layer of silver that is 99.9% pure. This is often done to give the coin a silver appearance and can increase the coin's value for collectors or investors.
You need to give the denomination and date of the coin. Also where you see the 77 at on the coin.
the silver content in the coin is equal to or greater than999 fine silver
The hole was used to tie a string in order to recover the coin once the coin was used in a vending machine .
This is the designers initial.
I means that is a coin made of 92.5% pure silver.
Denarius, which is the Latin word meaning "coin, money, or a Roman silver coin".
Though name meaning depend mostly on the characters used to spell them. From what I gather, Ginza means "Silver Coin" or "Silver Coin Mint"
The US issued no silver coins of any type in 1979, but if you mean a 1979 SBA dollar coin, just spend it.
If you mean no mintmark, it was struck in Philadelphia.