Archive for November, 2007
Critical condition is a medical condition.
Critical Condition may also be:
Critical Condition (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
Critical Condition (film), a 1987 comedy film
Antique Art Appraisal More Antique Appraisal Articles:. Appraisal · American-Coin-Old-Value · Antique-Appraisal-Canada · Antique-Appraisal-Coin · Antique-Art-Appraisal
Finance & Investment Education Collecting What Traits and Marks […]
Common coin errors || Brockage is relatively
0 Comments Published November 30th, 2007 in UncategorizedAn error coin is a coin that is minted abnormally. Many different types of errors can occur during the minting process. The following are some of the most common error types.
Numismatic Value of Error Coins
Most error coins demand a premium when sold, if they are modern coins, dependent upon the rarity of the type of […]
Nickle may refer to:
Nickle programming language, a numeric oriented programming language
Nickle, another name for the European woodpecker
Nickle is an alternative, rarely-used spelling for:
nickel, the chemical element
Nickel (Canadian coin), a five-cent coin
Nickel (United States coin), a five-cent coin
Also see
Nickel (disambiguation)
CoinAppraisal.com Let us give you a free appraisal of your coins. There is no obligation. Ask an […]
Subdominant parallel || upside-down relative to
0 Comments Published November 30th, 2007 in UncategorizedIn music theory, the subdominant parallel is terminology used in German theory derived mainly from Hugo Riemann, Sp, in major, and sP, in minor, is the (US) relative to the subdominant and is thus considered to have or fulfill the function of the subdominant.
In C major:
Sp is D-minor, US supertonic
In C minor:
sP is Ab-major, US […]
The two pence coin was the third smallest denomination of the Irish pound which was decimalised on Decimal Day, February 15, 1971. It was the third of three new designs introduced all in bronze.
The coin was designed by the Irish artist Gabriel Hayes and the design is adapted from the Second Bible of Charles the […]
Lyapunov function || definite brockage can sell
0 Comments Published November 30th, 2007 in UncategorizedLyapunov functions are of interest in mathematics, especially in stability theory. Lyapunov functions, named after Aleksandr Mikhailovich Lyapunov, are by definition functions which prove the stability of a certain fixed point in a dynamical system or autonomous differential equation. Functions which might prove the stability of some equilibrium are called Lyapunov-candidate-functions.
There is no general method […]
The penny coin was the third smallest denomination of the Irish pound at 1/240 of a pound. At the time of the coin’s introduction it was described as “most frequently used by the women of the house and by the children”, this description today would almost certainly lead to accusations of sexism but in […]
A pattern coin is a coin produced for the purpose of evaluating a proposed coin design, but which was not approved for general circulation. Generally, these coins are of interest only to collectors of pattern coins. However, pattern coins that are later selected for normal production, such as the United States 1856 Flying Eagle […]
The Isle of Man, a British protectorate, mints the Noble, a platinum bullion coin. Nobles are legal tender, but do not have a value associated with any currency (like the gold Krugerrand does).
The value of a Noble is equal to the platinum content of the coin.
External links
Northwest Territorial Mint
FREE Appraisals on Coin […]
Gold Eagle may mean:
The Golden Eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) is one of the best known birds of prey in the Northern Hemisphere.
The American Gold Eagle is the official gold bullion coin of the United States.
The Eagle, a gold coin with a denomination of 10 dollars.
Harlequin Enterprises Ltd, publisher of Gold Eagle books
T-50 Golden Eagle, South Korean […]
Trader’s Currency Token of the Magdalen Islands || Coin
0 Comments Published November 29th, 2007 in UncategorizedThe Magdalen Islands had only one coin - a 1 Penny token issued in 1815 by Sir Isaac Coffin.
The obverse of the coin depicts a seal on an ice floe. It is inscribed ‘MAGDALEN ISLAND TOKEN 1815′. The reverse of the coin depicts two gutted fish similar to that depicted on 1/2d. tokens from […]
The dollar coin may refer to coins of currencies that are named dollar. Note that some of these currencies may have banknotes (bills) for 1 dollar instead.
See also
One dollar coin (Australian)
Loonie (1 Canadian dollar coin)
Dollar (United States coin)
COIN APPRECIATION EVENT File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLCOIN APPRECIATION EVENT. Purchase the […]
The fifty pence coin was introduced on February 17 1970 and is a seven sided coin, an equilateral curve heptagon of constant breadth (3 centimetres) and mass 13.5 grams. The sides are not straight but are curved so that the centre of curvature is the opposite apex of the coin - this is an equilateral […]
Jim Lounsbury (born February 24, 1923 in Colo, Iowa) was an early pioneer in rock and roll music, hosting many of the first rock and roll radio programs (WIND, WJJD, Chicago, WOR, New York) and later many rock and roll television shows, including Jim Lounsbury’s Sock Hop, “Bandstand Matinee”‘, and “The Record Hop” (WGN […]
American 5-cent Coin Design Continuity Act || Coin
0 Comments Published November 29th, 2007 in UncategorizedThe American 5-cent Coin Design Continuity Act of 2003 (Public law 108-15, 31 United States Code 5101) allowed coinage of the commemmorative Westward Journey Nickel Series and mandated that Monticello be depicted on the 2006 nickel, as it had been previously.
The act also established the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee.
External links
Text of the act, from loc.gov
CURRICULUM […]
Koban can refer to two different Japanese words, with different pronunciations:
kōban (交番), with a long o: Koban (police box)
Koban (小判), with a short o: Koban, a former Japanese oval gold coin
It is also the name of the ancient Koban culture in Ossetia.
How to Determine the Value of a Coin | eHow.com Take your […]
In numismatics, a mule is a coin or medal minted with obverse and reverse designs not normally seen on the same piece. These can be intentional or produced by error. This type of error is highly sought after, and examples can fetch steep prices from collectors.
Several prominent mule errors have been discovered in recent […]
The Quarter Florin or Helm was an attempt by English king Edward III to produce a gold coinage suitable for use in Europe as well as in England (see also Florin or Double Leopard and Half Florin or Leopard). The quarter florin, based on contemporary European gold coins had a value of one shilling and […]
The Kronenthaler was a silver coin first issued in the Austrian Netherlands (see Austrian Netherlands Kronenthaler). It contained one ninth of a Cologne mark of silver and was thus equal to the Reichsthaler of the Leipzig convention. After the Austrian Netherlands was occupied by France, several German states (Bavaria, Baden, Hesse-Darmstadt and Württemberg) issued Kronenthaler, […]
In mathematics, Seifert-Weber space is a closed hyperbolic 3-manifold. It is also known as Seifert-Weber dodecahedral space and hyperbolic dodecahedral space. It is one of the first discovered examples of closed hyperbolic 3-manifolds.
To construct it, notice that each face of a dodecahedron has an opposite face. We will glue each face to […]
In microeconomics, the reservation (or reserve) price is the maximum price a buyer is willing to pay for a good or service; or, conversely, the minimum price at which a seller is willing to sell a good or service. Reservation prices are commonly used in auctions.
Reservation prices vary for the buyer according to their disposable […]
Steven Taylor may refer to:
Steve Taylor (boxer), a bare-knuckle boxer
Steven Taylor (footballer) the Newcastle United footballer
Steven Taylor (Doctor Who) one of the companions of the First Doctor from the television series Doctor Who
Steve P Taylor (writer) a UK writer and campaigner on prisons
Steven W. Taylor the Oklahoma Supreme Court justice
Steven V. Taylor, an American music […]
The lira (plural lire) was the currency of San Marino from the 1860s until the introduction of the euro in 2002. It was equivalent to the Italian lira. Italian coins and banknotes and Vatican City coins were legal tender in San Marino, whilst Sammarinese coins, minted in Rome, were legal tender throughout Italy, as […]
A slow virus is a virus, or a viruslike agent, etiologically associated with a disease having a long incubation period of months to years with a gradual onset frequently terminating in severe illness and/or death.
A slow virus disease is a disease that follows a slow, progressive course spanning months to years, frequently involving the central […]
For the R&B group, see Mint Condition.
Mint condition is an expression used in the description of pre-owned goods. Originally, the phrase comes from the way collectors describe the condition of coins. As the name given to a coin factory is a ‘mint’, then mint condition is the condition a coin is in as it leaves […]
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