I'm Pretty sure it stands for Carats Gold. Not real carrots that are orange and you eat, but carats that tell you how much gold is in your ring.
Is it a gold ring? If it is the 15 pts means it is 9 carat gold. Not sure about thr other stamp though.
The stamp "CG" on metal typically signifies that the metal has been certified to meet certain quality standards, particularly in industries like manufacturing and construction. It often indicates compliance with specific regulatory requirements or safety standards. The exact meaning can vary depending on the context and the industry, so it's important to check with relevant standards or guidelines for clarity.
a hula hoop, a ring, a doughnut
cg animation simply means animation generated by computers. (Computer graphics)
Centigram (cg).Centigram (cg).Centigram (cg).Centigram (cg).
CG Coast Guard Governmental » Military CG Computer Graphics CG Congo CG Control Group CG Computer Generated CG Conjugate Gradient CG Card Game CG Commanding General CG Computer Graphic CG Center of Gravity CG Ciba Geigy CG Curious George CG Current Generation CG Character Generator CG Console Games CG Computer Gaming CG Cloud To Ground CG Commercial Grade CG Chorionic Gonadotrophin CG Cell Group CG Cute Girl CG Cool Guy CG Contact Group CG Central Galaxy CG Creative Genius
Straps and zippers work
dg,dg,dg,dg cg, cg, bg,bg, cg, cg,cg,cg,cg,cg,cg.cg,bg,bg,bg,bg,b,bg,bg,bg that is the cords you need to know bye bye
given the technological age we live in - my guess would be Computer Generated.
I have an old gold ring with markings CG&S - CROWN - 22 - ANCHOR - N I know the ring was made by Charles Green and it is 22 carat gold but I am unsure of the rest. Can someone please help
0.3 cg
You can measure the mass of anything in centigrams. The centi- prefix means 1/100, so 1 cg = 1/100 g (one hundredth of a gram). For heavier objects the numbers could be extremely large: for example the penny piece weighs 356 cg, the current pound coin weighs 950 cg; a standard bag of sugar 200,000 cg; a fully laden London bus 1,800,000,000 cg. It would be therefore be sensible to weigh smaller objects, up to about 1 gram, for example a postage stamp. The prefixes to units (micro-, milli-, centi-, kilo-, etc) are used to make the number preceding the unit "reasonable". eg the fully laden bus is 1,800,000,000 cg but using Megagrams this is 18 Mg. (1 Mg is known as 1 tonne, so the bus weights 18 tonnes fully laden).