Each coin is of face value Dram 25 and contains 1 troy ounce of 9990 pure fine silver with diameter 38 mm. |
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That left scalpers who had expected to sell seats for many times their face value scrambling to offload them at knock-down prices. |
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A Courage card's courage is represented by its face value or fifteen if it is a face card. |
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But he almost never treats it at face value, preferring to allow interpretive openings into this method of interpretation. |
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Commemorative coins have been struck, but sold for much more than the metal value and often for more than face value. |
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Biddle actively pursued a policy of pressing state banks to redeem their outstanding banknotes at promised par or face value in specie. |
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The demise of party political groupings in favour of independent people who are prepared to examine issues at face value would be an added bonus. |
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A Seattle ordinance forbids the resale of tickets in the city for more than their face value. |
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I know some jurisdictions don't even allow you to sell your tickets at or below face value. |
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No one was allowed to ask for or pay more than the face value of a coin in exchange for a new quarter. |
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The vouchers may or may not have a fixed face value or be tradable between citizens. |
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By the end of the year, its market value had fallen to 66 percent of its face value. |
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The buyer pays the full face value for each bond then earns interest on top of their investment. |
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The rules have stated that only the nominal face value of shares needs to be disclosed, but that rarely bears any relation to the actual value. |
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Some of the countries have also introduced commemorative coins with the face value of 10 Euro. |
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One of the coins in the set was a 2 ore coin with the face value of about 9 satang. |
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If you buy a ticket as part of a package you should be told the face value of the ticket. |
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Money forgers usually gain only the face value of the banknotes they have forged. |
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So far, that set has lured bids of up to four times the face value of the coins. |
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Among them were a gold coin with the face value of 6,000 baht and a silver coin with a face value of 600 baht. |
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Nor can the surviving pieces of evidence of past happenings be taken at face value. |
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For the moment, it seems reasonable to accept these comments at face value. |
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His comments would be less likely to be taken at face value if your readers were made aware of this important fact. |
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Even if taken at face value, what is to be gained by this decentralisation? |
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At face value, the changes suggested appear to be well-intentioned, but flawed. |
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We accept this promise at face value because, well, who doesn't want a better life? |
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Now take it at face value, and that's halving the unemployment rate in this country. |
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I take people at face value, weigh them by their worth, and where they come from doesn't matter to me. |
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Well, Kimbro and others insist that we should embrace that saying at face value. |
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The company concluded that investors are no longer prepared to accept the word of corporate executives simply at face value. |
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In Japan, counterfeiters are circulating fake bills that cost more to make than their face value. |
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In truth, he was a remote, inaccessible figure to most tribal people, and his traditionalist pretensions were rarely accepted at face value. |
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Is there any risk that the two euro coin will be mistaken for the Thai 10 baht piece, whose face value is eight times less? |
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Most of the pip card are worth their face value, which is added to the value of the pile. |
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For purpose the picture cards count 12 and 11 and the pip cards have their face value. |
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On the death of the insured, term insurance pays the face value of the policy to the named beneficiary. |
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It appears that millions had begun to internalize the language of the regime, to take at face value its claims to be building socialism. |
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We must take it at face value for there is no torment beyond the exuberant grins, coy smirks or contemplative musings of any of the grandmothers. |
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However, at face value, it's a lot to pay for a three-button, corded mouse. |
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There's the simple, straightforward, credulous voice of the listener, who takes bands, songs and packages at face value. |
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He also warned against taking the company's bad debt provisions at face value. |
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Rather than accepting life and its givens at face value, he refers to his Pyrrhonism, or skepticism, about the ways of the world. |
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Some of the editors continued to take his hoax essay at face value even after he had revealed his dupery. |
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We've learnt at The Sunday Times never to take manufacturers' claims for top speed and acceleration at face value. |
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At maturity the Discount House will collect the face value of the bill from the acceptor. |
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If you're an extreme utilitarian, you might just accept the calculation at face value and waste the little guy. |
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In this game kings, queens and jacks are worth half a point each, and the numeral cards are worth their face value. |
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Instead of taking a percentage cut of a bond's face value, some charge a flat fee. |
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The Times article accepts the claims of military intelligence at face value. |
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Someone with autism and Asperger's syndrome will take at face value what is said to them. |
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It is a condition of sale that tickets are not sold on for more than their face value. |
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At their face value, these estimates indicate little evidence for directional selection. |
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I don't know why people sell perfectly good stamps below face value when you can always use them to mail letters. |
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The bank discount rate normalizes by the face value of the security and understates the true yield earned by investors. |
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Taken at face value it might seem quite a silly idea but in fact it was based on some fundamental truths. |
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The coins could, in uncirculated condition, be bought for face value, while in proof condition one had to pay double face value. |
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It looks for firms whose debts are undervalued and trading at a large discount to their face value. |
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Her status as a celebrity will make many undiscriminating or unknowing people buy the book and take her arguments at face value. |
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Meanwhile, someone untrained in music or drama or whatever can enjoy a performance and take it at face value. |
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Some people have doubted its veracity, but I'm willing to take it at face value. |
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After the invasion, she took the minister's word at face value, when a 30-second search on the internet could have told her it was bunkum. |
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Here is a perfect example of why you should never accept at face value how the work of scientists is reported in the non-scientific media. |
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These coins have a face value, but the actual value is the price of gold. |
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In a viatical settlement, a person with a terminal disease sells his or her life insurance policy at a discount from its face value in exchange for ready cash. |
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But let's put partisan spin aside and accept Christie's contrite denials of personal knowledge at face value. |
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People were satisfied and extremely elated with the overall results, as they fitted in with the concept of a truly national party, even on face value. |
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It would be delusory to take the MB's democratic protestations at face value. |
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Essentially, we are being left in a position where we are expected to just take agency promises at face value. |
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As a journalist, I knew not to accept anything on the Internet at face value. |
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The ticket refund covers the face value of tickets purchased for race day. |
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Certainly, at face value you could argue that there is nothing astounding about the findings of this comparison between display advertising and inserts. |
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The actual redemption rate will be a function of the face value of the coupon relative to the price of the brand, as well as the expiration period. |
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But accepting the data at face value raises the interesting possibility that hierarchy may be quite labile, that hierarchical saltations may be relatively easy in evolution. |
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The film taken at face value leaves a distinctly bad taste in the mouth. |
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And until six years ago, when the NFL began offering them tickets at face value, they had to hunt for tickets, occasionally resorting to purchasing them from scalpers. |
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Token money has an intrinsic value less than its face value. |
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Stanley takes the statement at face value as self-explanatory. |
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From 1955 to 1963, he was Chairman of the National Bank, an Irish clearing bank, again confounding those who took his owlish, academic demeanour at face value. |
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It cannot be seen at face value, as merely the making of a valid work of art out of anything that is at hand, its graphic and painterly qualities notwithstanding. |
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It is one of the most commonly collected artefacts, where its market worth is arbitrarily unhinged from its clearly marked original face value, in the philatelist's eye. |
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Taken at face value, the question seems simple enough but scratch it and the hidden prejudices and stereotypes tumble out of the cupboard like the proverbial skeletons. |
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Sometimes, I guess, when I dress it up in sarcasm and with a wide grin like I'm playing about, something almost truthful slips out, but no one ever takes it at face value. |
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If we take it at face value, the whole episode was a terrible accident, but the way the police have handled the aftermath has perhaps done them more harm than good. |
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In the same way nobody who reads a press-release accepts the face value, so can the Chinese learn how to use newspeak to get their message across. |
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Where vouchers do not cover the cost of the selected product, they reduce the cost at their face value. |
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However, modern bullion coins generally do not enter common circulation despite having legal tender status and a nominal face value. |
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Everyone received face value for wartime certificates, so that the national honor would be sustained and the national credit established. |
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Sometimes Nichols appears too ready to take at face value Ravel's overmodest words on his own output. |
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Whilst this proposal is at face value counter-intuitive, it is not inconsistent with recent findings relating to the placebo effect in medicine. |
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Please take this comment at face value and don't try to read anything into it. |
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That she is, but daub took the phone call to Hill at face value. |
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Malta has produced collectors' coins with face value ranging from 10 to 50 euro. |
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These commercial banknotes only traded at face value in the market served by the issuing bank. |
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Crowns, therefore, had a face value of 25p from decimalisation until 1981, when the last 25p crown was struck. |
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The traditional bullion coin issued by Britain is the gold sovereign, formerly a circulating coin with a face value of one pound. |
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The printing of Puffin stamps continues to this day and they are available at face value from the Lundy Post Office. |
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The accuracy of these late sources is not taken at face value by modern historians and their validity is a topic of some debate. |
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Shillings were used in Malta, prior to decimalisation in 1972, and had a face value of five Maltese cents. |
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The proclamation required that the coins weigh one and two ounces respectively, bringing the intrinsic value of the coins close to their face value. |
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Decimal crowns are generally not found in circulation as their market value is likely to be higher than their face value, but they remain legal tender. |
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It arises from the difference between the face value of a coin or bank note and the cost of producing, distributing and eventually retiring it from circulation. |
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A decimal halfpenny was issued until 1984 in an attempt to stop inflation but was removed due to having a higher cost to manufacture than its face value. |
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In 1826, there was outrage in Scotland at the attempt of the United Kingdom Parliament to prevent the production of banknotes of less than five pounds face value. |
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The evangelical wing of the Church has taken the Articles at face value. |
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