Quite likely, although my first thought was "fire damage".
[ATTACH] I was unclear in my wording. A mintage of 800 million across two years is equivalent to a mintage of 400 million per year. That's not at...
That's what I thought, but there were mintages earlier in the decade much more than half that (about 800 million each for P&D), and higher still...
Well, it was one-time, but that one time was two years long. That led to mintages that were quite high.
Just like every preceding generation. By the way, how are you at adjusting your car's choke and spark advance as it warms up?
Coins that aren't going up in value? Zincolns! Still rotting away from the day they're struck.
Well, whatever your definition of "hunt for", articles like that one will keep us well-supplied with new arrivals posting their beat-up 1975-P...
I've made this point any number of times. I've concluded that some people simply do not want to understand how rounding works.
But never "y'all's" unless there's more than one of you.
Of course! The goal is "GET MORE COINS"!
Wasn't that the one that listed dates and claimed values for hundreds of strike-doubled coins?
But the important question is, HOW DID IT SHOW UP ON YOUR STATEMENT?!
Hmm. I don't hear people down here using "yore", and I don't even see it in print as much as I did in days of yore. ;)
That's an excellent point. One could argue that the cent impedes commerce, slowing cash transactions as people waste time counting or gathering...
Presumably because they are already tracked and reported.
I'm not sure how I could make that any clearer. I have no idea what your point is -- at this point, at least. :)
You mean at the gas stations that currently post prices to the tenth of a cent per gallon?
Separate names with a comma.