Images are poor, Even from these the style looks wrong. The reverse looks to be a PACI type of Claudius.
First, welcome to the neighborhood, @Wendy21 ! I really don't know anything about "ancients", so I'll just take a spicy chicken sandwich with a large Frostie, and I'll be on my way. Chris
Welcome Wendy21, We'd be glad to help but you need to post clear pictures of the coin and let us know what the diameter of the coin is (preferably in mm, not inches). Understand that there are many similar obverse portraits and reverse designs, along with unfortunately a lot of fakes, and we want to give you an accurate identification.
FYI, "clear" means pictures that are in focus (not blurred) -- not just a picture that shows the complete coin. Also, it's most important to post clear pictures of the obverse (the side with the bust/portrait of the emperor) since the reverse (the side that you posted recently) many times can be attributed to multiple emperors and thus is less helpful in identifying the coin. Hope this helps.
Roman Silver Coins by Seaby lists the type for Vespasian noting most are fourree and probably ancient forgeries but there are genuine Eastern mint PACI coins with Victory instead of Nemesis. Fuzzy photos make it hard to be certain but my guess is a plated coin with core showing on the lower left obverse edge. Being plated would lower the market value but not eliminate the interest in the coin among specialists. I wish there were a way we could get across the importance of learning to take decent photos of BOTH sides when asking help. Few phones (and fewer cameras) of the last few years can not take a sharp close up photo if the user takes the trouble to read the instructions. Try again.