In these tough times, everyone seems to be just a bit short at the end of the day. We all seem to be looking for a way to get that little income boost. One way that you can bring in some extra cash is to sell silver. Gold and silver prices are at historic highs, so, it really would be a good time to consider looking into this, and you really can make some extra cash if you sell silver. With prices at a premium you can definitely turn a profit with old jewelry and coins in the current market conditions.
We all have a few pieces of old or broken jewelry that we no longer want or use, so why not check it out? You could sell silver for some extra cash to an online broker and have those bills caught up in no time at all. MyGoldEnvelope.com is one online buyer that is owned by a public company and this is a place that you can sell silver and gold. Request a free submission pack and get cash on the way within 24 hours, it's as easy as pie.
If you sell silver to a pawn shop, you will likely get a much lower price, than from an online buyer. Online buyers usually have their own refinery and therefore offer much better prices to those who want to sell silver or gold. Let's face it, we are looking for the most money from the items, and if we sell silver, then we certainly would like the best offer for our items, and now is the time for the best offer.
When you sell silver or gold online, you get a guarantee whereas if you do not like the price, you do not have to accept it and are able to get back your items. Some sites even offer to double your money if you find a better offer elsewhere and this insures you the absolute best price if you choose to sell silver or gold. Your items are sent in their insured pack and you are not taking a risk of having them lost or stolen without compensation of the items.
Precious metal prices being at these highs may not last forever, so you might want to consider that if the price comes down you may not get as much if you should decide to sell silver at a later date. Historically gold and silver price go up in bad economic times, and tend to be lower when things are running smoothly. In hoping that the economy gets better, we are wishing these prices down in a manner of thinking. These considerations should be looked at if you are going to sell silver.
Frequently Asked Questions
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QUESTION:
Where to sell Silver and Gold coins for CASH money!!?
Ok My grandfather passed away and he left me a chess full of silver and gold coins.... i know they are worth a lot of money, but i dont know who to sell them to or how to turn it into cash? can someone help me?
ITS REAL GOLD AND SILVER GOT IT TESTED!-
ANSWER:
My friend sold a bunch of her silver, gold and platinum. I don't know what the best thing to do in your situation is.
My friend compared of online places, and she found one she really liked. It is a member of the BBB, featured in USA Today, and has a great reputation. Plus, they were willing to give her the most money, and paid her fast. I will provide the link for you below. There is a lot of great information on the site.
Good Luck! Hope you get what you want for it!
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QUESTION:
What is the best way to sell some silver coins, getting the most for my money?
I have alot of dimes and silver quarters..Where is best place to get highest price for them as I know silver is at a high now.Do I have to go to a dealer or is there any place I can go direct to cash-
ANSWER:
you could go to a dealer, but s/he would buy them likely at a steep discount.otherwise, you could just as well sell to a private person and you could probably agree to the current silver price.
if you were located in NYC, where i live, i'd offer to buy them from you myself, as i am always in the market (disclaimer: i am not a dealer, just a buyer able and willing to pay current spot prices.).
PS - you could look into ebay.
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QUESTION:
How much is this coin worth and where can I sell it or cash it?
I have this coin that's 1 oz. Fine silver that says one dollar on the back. I looked up how much the coin is worth and I found that its worth nearly . It's dated 2007. Problem is, I don't know anyone who will want to buy it. Can I cash it somewhere like a bank or something? Please tell me what you know. I have no use for this coin and I'd rather have cash.-
ANSWER:
If it says one dollar on the back, then yes you can cash it in at the bank. They will give you one dollar for it.If you want to get what it's worth, at least in silver content, you'll probably want to sell it to a coin dealer. You could also try eBay, many coins get bought and sold there.
It sounds like you have a Silver Eagle (they have walking liberty on the front, a eagle and shield on the back). They have a face value, but contain 1 troy ounce of silver. A troy ounce of silver is going for about today (it fluctuates often).
2007 wasn't a rare year or anything. Unless it's a proof or graded, you should probably expect about from a coin dealer, or about on eBay.
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QUESTION:
I'm looking to sell some silver,but...?
I'm not sure if a coin dealer is my best option. I started buying silver when it was at oz Now that it is at I was thinking of cashing some in. I plan on hanging on to the cash and re-buying when it drops. I'm not a huge investor. Just an average Joe sitting on 150oz of silver, and 5oz gold. Any help would be great. I was told by a guy at a coin shop to watch my silver/gold and try to sell, and buy as I go. I'm only looking to sell about 80-100oz's of 1oz bars & coins. Also how much under spot should I expect? Again I am new.Thank you for any help.
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ANSWER:
Try kitco, or maybe ebay. But I suspect your easiest bet is a coin dealer. Buying & selling physical silver has it's problems. You buy at a premium, and you sell at a discount. I would imagine you will get 10 - 20% under spot.Since you get hit with a mark-up on each silver bar you buy, I would buy 10oz bar's (or maybe larger) instead of 1oz.
I own 10 oz silver bars & 100+ morgan silver dollars. In addition to this, I have a handful of Krugerrands.
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QUESTION:
Is it remotely possible that people think when they buy TV commemorative coins they are getting real money?
I see people asking if they can trade the TV commercial "commemorative" 1877 Gold Coin for cash!!!! The thing only costs .95 and then they give you another coin, a silver dollar. That silver dollar even says on the back it is pure silver "clad". The commercial clearly says the coins are both "clad". If someone is thinking they are going to buy for .95 then God help us. Clad means plated, as in covered in gold or silver, or to make it easier gold plated and silver plated. They are probably copper that is plated with the other metals. They are not meant to be confused with being real money and I'm betting they aren't selling them with the hopes that thousands of people will even remotely believe they are getting for ! Then I see all of the "coin experts" coming in with their brilliant lessons about the value of these coins if they were genuine. If you listen to the commercial it says there were only 2 of these coins ever struck (made at the US Mint) and they are both in the Smithsonian. So these brilliant coin experts telling the other geniuses who are thinking that they might be able to scam someone into buying the fake coins for what they would be worth if they were real - 00-2300 - are insane!!! The actual 2 coins sold for ,000 each in 1909 before the government got them back. Right now they would be worth multi-millions each if they were ever taken out of the Smithsonian Institution, the museum of the United States of America in Washington D.C. - one of the most heavily secured buildings in the country.Bottom line. If you watch a commercial selling coins for less than face value, please be smart enough to realize they are NOT real and you can NOT get more money than you paid for them unless you find someone else who is even more easily fooled than you are. That was as polite as I could say that. Gold is worth 26 per ounce as of today. The fake coin is said to weigh 2 1/2 ounces. Did you really think you were buying 65 worth of gold for .95!!!??? Silver is worth .63 per ounce today. So, if you are foolish enough to believe that you were going to be getting over 00 worth of precious metal for a 20 dollar bill then you almost deserve to get screwed. You could definitely find someone out there at a burger joint who will believe the coin is real and they will even make change for you, but hen you can pretty much count on getting arrested after they pull your picture off of the video camera. Please have enough intelligence to understand that you shouldn't do it. Fake money is just fake money. Leave it in the pretty blue box and enjoy it's beauty. Next time you see a commercial selling money - IT"S FAKE! Don't buy it.
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ANSWER:
Yes , after all we're talking about Americans here.
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QUESTION:
How do you buy silver as an investment?
I would like to buy some gold and silver as an investment, but I don't know where to start. Where would I go to buy some coins at a fair price, and what do i buy? mint? uncirculated coins? When I sell them, can I just exchange it for cash? thanks-
ANSWER:
I think the price is too high from here. Sadly, i had a short on slv in the high 18's and my buy to cover was set for 18.02. i missed out on a lot of downside on my short. I'm assuming your looking for physical silver, as in ounce coins? i used to get one a year with my Dad when I was younger. Typically for 7-8$ each. Won't buy at these levels.
look for a local coin shop that offers competitive prices compared to the spot value of the given market. look to pay a little above the going rate for an oz of each.You could POSSIBLY sell them to a local coin shop for a discount to the given spot price. They are not that easy to just swap out for cash. the price and even what price someone want them for would hihgly fluctuate.
I would keep an eye on gld or slv for the stock market, I wouldn't buy the paper security though, for the price of physical. Although, selling the gld or slv would be easier online than a sale of physical, in my opinion.
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QUESTION:
my dad told me to sell his belonging to pay for his funeral , while he was dieing my sister grabbed the goods
his cash and silver coins about 10,000 dollars which he said was to be used for his burial , State said no way to go after the asset what would you do??????-
ANSWER:
Am really at a loss here..am not a lawyer.
And supposedly "blood is thicker than water"??It should have been put on paper..is there a will ?
Is there recorded proof of the money that he had ? bank account statements etc..Can you show to a lawyer that you spent time and care for your dying father ..and what about your sister ?
Anyway to prove that she syphoned the money away ?
Make details and record sudden new spendings that she is making..improving the house and stuff like that ?
Did you dad have a computer and could you show emails if such things were spoken about ?
At a loss here..Don't know about the American law system.
I don't think cremation is cheap..not from what I have heard around here anyway.
Can't help but feeling sorry for you. Some families can be really crass I know that. Am dealing with with a really stinky situation myself where common sense just goes out of the window and some people are so greedy and heartless..
But what comes around....
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QUESTION:
Do places like Cash 4 gold and A Gold 2 Cash Exchange buy 1932-1964 washington quarters for melt value?
I have around 140 old silver coins and with the rocketing melt values I was wondering if I would be able to sell them for it-
ANSWER:
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QUESTION:
Do 1965 -1970 American Quarters have any silver in them ?
I understand that 1964 and below all have silver in them and Gold buy and sell businesses buy them for cash. I know a business owner who buys quarters from 1965 to 1970 and claims they all have a certain amount of silver in them but I couldn't find that information anywhere on the internet. I even called some coin experts and they all said that those quarters don't contain silver.-
ANSWER:
Are you sure this business owner didn't say half dollars? The 1965-1970 halves are 40% silver, but the silver was removed from quarters and dimes starting in 1965.
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QUESTION:
Will i get spot price for silver dimes, quarters, and half dollars?
I have about 750 silver dimes and other assorted silver coins. Do coin shops usually only buy when silver is down in price? If silver were to go to 100 dollars tomorrow do you think i would even be able to sell them? Am i gonna be hard pressed to find someone willing to pay there value according to coinflation.com? I want ebay to be my last resort but it might be the best way, i would like to hear some opinions. Yes i know i should hold on the coins for when the SHTF but i really dont care i need some cash now...
BS thats the dumbest thing i have ever heard get off of here you dont know what you are talking about-
ANSWER:
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QUESTION:
looking to buy 2010 proof silver and gold eagles and gold buffalos....?
coin collecting noob here...apologies ahead of time for the lengthy question....im planning on buying one each 2010 proof silver eagles, gold eagles, and gold buffalos. (yes, 2010, not 2011). mostly to commemorate something very important. and im planning on having them for 5...10...20 years or more. who knows. not doing it for an investment per-se...but if down the line i do decide to sell them, i wouldnt mind getting some extra cash for them.
now i dont know if i should buy the coins that were issued straight from the mint (in the fancy velvet boxes) or should i be looking for MS70 graded coins?
ive read opinions that modern day proof and bullion coins that are rated (ie; slabbed) by the rating companies are a scam because...
a.) theres so many of them that are being produced which doestn make them scarce at all
b.) a modern day coin proof/bullion is never circulated anyway, so of course theyre all going to be rated 70 (or 69 at worse).so if should i be shopping for proof coins, or MS 70 graded coins?
also, if slabbed coins are better, which of the grading companies are better...ngc, pcgs...etc. i know that 'first strike' is the most desirable of these 'graded' coins. i also know that the gold buffalo 'black diamond' that is sold by apmex is a complete and utter scam.
thanks very much for any info.
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ANSWER:
The coins you are looking for are only available through licensed dealers. For a list of PCGS dealers, go to the American Numismatic Association web site. (coins.org). The difference between proof 69 and proof 70 coins are tiny defects in the edge and are not visible in slabs. It is your own preference weather you buy proof or uncirculated coins. Proofs are better looking but MS69/70 are scarcer.
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QUESTION:
How do I finish my research paper off?
Just need one or two more sentences,
what should I say?:Moran 1
Ashley Moran
April 21, 2009
English I, Pre-AP
Ms. Johnson“Economy”
The Elizabethan Era was one where many changes were brought on. The age of mercantilism slowly closed, while the age of capitalism was rising. The change of life brought surprise to many, but mostly the “commoners”. The Elizabethan Era introduced a brand new way to live and experience life.
Manufacturing was done on a small scale - in households or small shops instead of large factories (Lace 35) . Labor was relatively cheap.- principally because it was widely accepted that commoners should expect a low standard of living (Singman 31). Manufactured goods, on the other hand, were comparatively expensive. There was almost no mechanization, so the vastly increased hours of labor more then negated the lower rate of pay. Moreover, prices would fluctuate according to time and place. (Singman 34). The growth of trade during Elizabeth’s reign and the movement towards a money economy (selling goods for cash instead of trading for other goods) led to growth in the number and the wealth of merchants. It was the merchants and the amount of wealth they controlled, who gave the cities economic power (Lace 37). Between 1500 and 1789 the trade in North American furs and hides was profitable in Western Europe for various people, such as: furriers, hatters, and leather makers. Medieval Europe had met it’s own
Moran 2
demand for furs until the supply of suitable animals was exhausted and buyers resorted to “common pelts” such as rabbit or in expensive furs from the east (Dewald 500).
Classical economic thought dominated the field from the 1820’s to the 1850’s. Ricardo’s life spanned the close of the age of mercantilism and the rise of capitalism. Ricardo’s interest in economics’ came after he read Adam Smith’s classic, “The Wealthier Nations“. (Powell et al 778) While Ricardo’s ideas have long since become out moded, he was the first to systematize the study of economics. Through his work he inspired both those who supported laissez-faire economic policy, such as David Hyme, and those who opposed it, favoring instead government control of the economy. Ricardo thought inductively, working from abstract principals to establish economic laws. For example: he saw that population was increasing, which resulted in humans competing for resources (Powell et all 780). On the other hand, Adam Smith’s approach to his work was first to do a historical study of his subject, and then to advance in the area, often building on the work of his contemporaries. Though, It has been shown that he was a most curious human being, Adam Smith displayed, in the writing of The Wealth of Nations, a “profound knowledge of the real occupations of mankind.” A situation that Smith observed in France, was one that was essentially brought on by taxation, a system that made people “exceedingly miserable,” a stem, which, in years to come, would bring on the French Revolution, and to bring, in it‘s wake, Napoleon. Thus Adam Smith, steeped into history and philosophy by writing his famous book “The Wealth of Nations“ (Landry).
The Elizabethan Era was a gate that let in currency of gold and silver coins, as opposed to just trading. Also, new economic idea’s were brought on with such people as: Adam Smith and David Ricardo, paving the way towards capitalist ground. Today’s economy is influenced by the Elizabethan Era’s economy in many ways.-
ANSWER:
The problem is that the last sentence is written like the topic sentence for a new paragraph. When you say, "Today’s economy is influenced by the Elizabethan Era’s economy in many ways," then the reader expects a list of those "many ways." So this can never be solved by adding -- unless you intend to add an entire new page.You can end this paragraph -- not by adding a couple of sentences -- but by just deleting the last sentence, letting the essay end on "Also, new economic idea’s were brought on with such people as: Adam Smith and David Ricardo, paving the way towards capitalist ground."
This (now) final sentence can be re-phrased to make it into something more like a summary:
"The new ideas of such economists as Adam Smith and David Ricardo, combined with the innovations in currency of the Elizabethan era, ushered in the modern economic age and paved the way for the capitalism of today."
___________Dear Student ~
This is an unusually fine essay -- quite good work. If you'd like me to edit your paper for grammar, you can contact me through the link in my profile.
~ Ms. Worth
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QUESTION:
Do I have to legally return the money?? Help!!!! Am I Going to Jail?
Ok so I bought 20 silver panda coins from china, I got a good price. I wanted to make sure they were 100% real so I took me to 3 coin shops, all 3 coin shops said they were 100% real. I had one of the coin shops acid test the silver and it passed. They then offered me .00 for each coin, I sold them! I asked them if they would want to buy more and the said hell yes, so I placed another order with china for the same coins, but a way bigger order. When I got the 240 coins in I took them down to the same coin shop and they wrote me a check for over ,000.00. They dated the check for that day but asked me to wait to cash it till the next day. The next day rolls around so I go to the bank on my lunch break and cash the check. About a hour later the coin shop calls me up and tells me that I need to come and give them the money back because they did more testing and found out they were fake. They said if I don’t they will call the cops and press charges for felony fraud! I already spent a lot of the money, so I don’t have. I took the coins to “experts” so something like this wouldn’t happen! I don’t feel I did anything wrong and I would rather not go to jail for trusting 3 “coin experts”!!!!
I did not take to 240 coin to any other expert other then the one I sold them to. also they don't even have all the coin left because they sold some to other people but they want a full refund even for the coins they don't have. I don't think they pulled a fast one becuase the coins looked the same to me. I did call the cops and they said how do you know they were the same coins.-
ANSWER:
By being in business, they are holding themselves out to the public as experts. As experts, they are to exercise due diligence when buying items from the public. Their testing in your presence for the original 20, and acceptance of them based on that testing, is enough to satisfy any court that you didn't defraud them. They are supposed to be the experts, not you. They aren't going to find much help from a judge if they come back at you after the fact.However, it's a different story on the second, larger batch. These also should have been tested in your presence if they had any doubts, but their argument may be a little stronger if they relied on the first batch (which may have been good for all we know - rip-off artists are famous for sucking you in with a great deal on legit items, a price too good to be true, a price guaranteed to get you to come back for even more, which is when they swindle you). If the store failed to do the testing, it wasn't smart on their part, but their case may be a little stronger.
But there's another problem for them. They sold some of what you sold them. They will have a difficult time proving in court that they did not substitute junk for the good coins you sold them.
The bottom line, though, is that this is not a criminal matter. The police will not charge you with a crime, because if they do, they run the very serious risk of a false arrest lawsuit. They will advise the store to file a civil lawsuit against you. And you, not being the expert, and them, being the expert, isn't going to look very good for them.
Stand your ground. Be prepared to hire a lawyer, but my guess is that the store will back down.
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QUESTION:
Im selling my moddedf gsg-5, Im starting my new collection?
IM selling my gsg-5. Front foregrip, ACOG 4x scope, 20mW Green Laser sight, red dot sight w/crosshair options and brightness control, and tac light w/ strobe. Included are 1 mag and soft case. Im asking 850 or best offer. Willing to accept rare silver or gold coins for trade + cash. My email is dayankee8972@aol.com, mrb0872@yahoo.com, or my cell 904 442 3343. Ask for Eric-
ANSWER:
You must be confused. This is not www.gunbroker.com.
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QUESTION:
What's a good way to keep your money safe when you can't use a bank account?
I'm disabled and I can't have more than 00 in my bank account or I'll lose all the money I'm getting from ssi- the money pays for the group home I'm living in. I want to work part time and save a lot of money to be secure- to eventually improve my situation and leave the group home and live in an apartment.I live with shifty roomates and holding all that cash for a long time, even in a safe or in storage is too risky. I also don't think gold or silver coins won't do well because they can easily be pawned.
I want to save around ,000 dollars. I was thinking of buying used Japanese cars- hold them for a couple years and then sell them. If I lose some money in the process, maybe a grand or two, that is fine; as long as I know my money is safe is what counts.
So, what do you think? Have you ever been in a situation like this?
PS I know good mechanics.-
ANSWER:
I would second the safety deposit box idea except that I would add that you could invest in bonds, gold and silver certificates and keep the certificates in the safety deposit box. You should still get a safe to keep your keys and wallet locked up when you're at home with your shifty room mates.Cars are a terrible investment, you would be better off buying scrapped Japanese cars in Japan shipping them over to strip for parts because Japan's tax structures encourages people to buy a new car every three years. In terms of used cars as something to keep your money in, they depreciate in value, they have a carrying cost in terms of storage, registration and insurance and they're not very liquid, you have to sell them to extract your money from them.
Maybe you should open an offshore banking account, maybe one of those virtual Internet Visa cards and put the money into that. I was going to suggest a brokerage account or a domestic prepaid visa card but both would require your SSN and have the same reporting requirements to the government that a bank account would have and indeed prepaid visa cards are actually debit cards on special bank accounts.
As to keeping your stuff secure while sharing accommodations, The problem with safes is that they can try combinations while in your absence but if you get a key based one, they can lift your key while you sleep. The best would be a safe that required both a key and a combination to open but very few safes have that feature. If you get a strong metal security box, that has a padlock hasp, perhaps a good toolbox, you can use a quality padlock, perhaps one of the ones that use the same keys as a housekey or an Abloy padlock, while you're away and use a quality combination lock where you can change the combinations while you're at home (the Masterlock Speed Dial lock is one that comes to mind). There's a company called Pacsafe that makes a line of wire mesh bags for use as travel safes. People often under-estimate the need for a good strong footlocker when living in shared accommodations.
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QUESTION:
How much is a 1986 1 oz. fine silver one dollar worth today?
I have a 1 oz. fine silver dollar. It has the eagle on the front with the 13 stars, and on the back it is liberty with the sun and reads in god we trust with the date 1986 at the bottom. It is a little worn, u can tell its older, but has not been handle much with hands. Its been sitting in my coin box for ages. Im now trying to bring in extra cash anyway i can and i was told this coin was worth some money. Somebody please let me know b/c i dont want to sell it if its not worth enough.-
ANSWER:
The side with Liberty on it is the obverse (front) the eagle side is the reverse (back). The 1986 silver eagle as it is called sells for .50 and dealers pay at least 40% less. The value given in for one in mint state ones that have been mishandled for they do not circulate are worth only the silver value at the time of sale minus a % the dealer takes off for profit. It pays in the end to protect ones coins.
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QUESTION:
Clever idea to beat the IRS?
Say you make 0 a week. Your employer pays you in cash but instead of bills he gives you a gold piece and a few Silver Eagle coins every 2 weeks. The face value of the coins is but the intrinsic value is ~00. Since the coins are legal tender, all the boss has to declare for tax purposes is the face value, NOT what they'd be worth if you sold them. Voila! No payroll taxes to be paid by the boss or income taxes for you. I can't see why this wouldn't be perfectly legal?
Well hey you know what? I just found a case of this happening in reality. AND HE GOT AWAY WITH IT. The IRS tried to get him and failed on every count. How about that!?
Here's the case:
http://www.vnnforum.com/showthread.php?t=70728-
ANSWER:
Since it seems that your employer is paying you under the table and in cash, you should not report your income. Of course if he reports it you would be screwed. Also, if he reports the actual value then you will still be screwed. If he doesn't report your pay, then why report your income?
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QUESTION:
Math "riddles" HELP!?
So pretty much i got a worksheet with about 25 of these terrible problems,
And i can NOT figure these one's out D:
Help me out please??1. When changing a dollar bill, you can give one coin(silver dollar),
two coins(2 half-dollars), three coins(1 half-dollar, two quarters),
and so forth. What is the least positive number of coins that it is
IMPOSSIBLE to give as change for a dollar bill?2. A boy is 4 ft. 8 in. tall. If he could walk across the earth along the
equator and if the equator were a circle, the top of his head would
travel father than his feet would travel. How much farther?3. Susan cashed a check at the bank, but the teller made a mistake.
He gave her as many dollars as he should have given cents and as
many cents as he should have given dollars. Susan took the money
without realizing the error and spent .50 . She then had twice as
much money as the actual amount of the check. What was the amount
of the check?4. Arrange the digits 0 through 9 so that he first digit is divisible by 1,
the first two digits are divisible by 2, the first three digits are divisible
by 3, and so on until the first ten digits are divisible by 10. What is the
ten-digit number?5. Near the end of a party, everyone shakes hands with everybody else.
A straggler who only knows a few people at the party arrives late and
shakes hands with only those people whom the straggler knew.
Altogether there were 68 handshakes total. How many people at the
party did the straggler know?6. If you are adding consecutive integers starting with one on a Calculator
with an 8-digit display that never uses scientific notation, how many
integers would have to be added in order to exceed the capacity of the
calculator.7. What is the millionth term in the sequence 1,2, 2, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, . . . ?
8. A goat on a 45-meter rope is tied at one vertex of a fence that encloses
a 30-meter equilateral triangle. How large is the area in which the goat
can graze?9. Weird Wine Company was owned by Weird Wally who had a strange way
of deciding in which years he produced new wine. He would produce a new
wine in any year in which the sum of the digits in the year the wine was
produced was equal to the sum of the digits in the year in which the wine
was sold and this sum is equal to the age, in years, of the wine when it is sold.
In what years in the 20th Century did the company produce wine?-
ANSWER:
1. You must mean that you have at least one dollar in US change as in Australia or New Zealand you can have one coin! I will say five: 1 half dollar, 1 quarter dollar, and 3 dimes.2. If the diameter of the earth is D, then the circumference of the earth is (pi * D) which is how far his feet travel. His head would travel {pi * (D + 9.33ft)}.
3. 100d + c = 2(100c + d) - 350
I will not do them all.
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QUESTION:
When will Democrats and Republicans join hands, sing "We are the World" and fix something?
they got over .2 billion* in donations from the lobbyists last year and more this year, but there comes a time to look out for the country and right now the economy is so shaky that anyone one of these weirdo deals could actually be the straw that broke the camels back.The US Mint is selling so much gold and silver bullion they haven't even done the collectible coins and may not.
It's a given since the health care lobbyists have given them (HOUse and Senate members) over half a billion, that whatever is passed will be for them.
last time this much cash was dumped on them it was by the insurance lobby and for the Medicare prescription drug bill, which by the way was only going to cost 0 billion over a ten year period, but was revised that same year *2003) to over a trillion. now it is .2 trillion.
How did that bill work, well Medicare got the shaft, seniors and people using a ton of drugs now pay over 5% more. The drug companies make a mint and flood the country with 3rd world "four dollar a holler" drugs. Not that there is anything wrong with third world drugs, well if they got clean water and stuff.
*opensecrets.orgPretty good answers and it does seem like a lawyer approach to pizza.
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ANSWER:
The Republicans could work with the Moderate Democrats but the Far Left controls the Democratic Party and there is no way they will compromise on anything with the Republicans.
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QUESTION:
Do I have to legally return the money?? Help!!!! Am I Going to Jail?
Ok so I bought 20 silver panda coins from china, I got a good price. I wanted to make sure they were 100% real so I took me to 3 coin shops, all 3 coin shops said they were 100% real. I had one of the coin shops acid test the silver and it passed. They then offered me .00 for each coin, I sold them! I asked them if they would want to buy more and the said hell yes, so I placed another order with china for the same coins, but a way bigger order. When I got the 240 coins in I took them down to the same coin shop and they wrote me a check for over ,000.00. They dated the check for that day but asked me to wait to cash it till the next day. The next day rolls around so I go to the bank on my lunch break and cash the check. About a hour later the coin shop calls me up and tells me that I need to come and give them the money back because they did more testing and found out they were fake. They said if I don’t they will call the cops and press charges for felony fraud! I already spent a lot of the money, so I don’t have. I took the coins to “experts” so something like this wouldn’t happen! I don’t feel I did anything wrong and I would rather not go to jail for trusting 3 “coin experts”!!!!-
ANSWER:
No this is not a case where you will be going to jail. Let them take you to court and settle the matter there. You sold an item for what you believed them to be you did not represent them to be something they were not.
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