CobraCobra or cobra or COBRA may refer to:
Fictional characters and organisations
Vehicles
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Cobra or cobra or COBRA may refer to:. Poland issued a fan-shaped 10 zloty coin but the oddest coin ever was the 2002 Nauru,Europe-shaped coin. Tradename for an early make of articulated lorry: there is an example in the Transport Museum in Leyland in Lancashire in England. Coins with guitar shapes were issued in Somalia this year. HMS Cobra is a Royal Navy destroyer. Bi-metallic coins are used for comemorative purposes and in the 1990s,France used a tri-metallic coin. CoBra is an engine made by Crosley. Some coins, called bracteates, are so thin they can only be struck on one side. Cobra is also the tradename for several types of cars with a common lineage: see AC Cars, Shelby Cobra, and Ford Mustang SVT Cobra. Such a coin is often said to be "weighted.". HMS Cobra, a Royal Navy destroyer. Coins are sometimes falsified to make one side weigh more. Army helicopter. See also coin flipping. The AH-1 Cobra, a U.S. A widely publicized example of an asymmetrical coin is the Belgian one euro coin(reference needed). The Cobra unit, a fictional special forces unit in the video game Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater. See Bernoulli trial; a fair coin is defined to have the probability of heads (in the parlance of Bernoulli trials, a "success") of exactly 0.5. Joe: A Real American Hero. Coins are popularly used as a sort of two-sided die; in order to choose between two options with a random possibility, one choice will be labeled "heads" and the other "tails," and a coin will be flipped or "tossed" to see whether the heads or tails side comes up on top. The COBRA Organization, a fictional organization in the animated television series G.I. Some older such designs remain, such as the 12-sided Australian 50 cent coin. The Cobra, a fictional character in the Marvel comics. If a coin had an even number of sides this would not be true. The Cape Cobras is a cricket team based in Cape Town, South Africa. This is so that the coin has a constant diameter, and therefore will be recognised by machines whichever way it is inserted. The Cobra (motion), a motion done by Donald Trump to discharge a contestant from the show The Apprentice. Coins that are not round (British 50 pence for example) usually have an odd number of sides, with the edges rounded off. federal statute, or health insurance provided under the act. Some coins have coin orientation, where the coin must be flipped vertically to see the other side; other coins, such as British coins, have medallic orientation, where the coin must be flipped horizontally to see the other side. Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985, a U.S. The orientation of the obverse with respect to the reverse differs between countries. Cabinet Office Briefing Room A, a secure facility of the United Kingdom government that co-ordinates action during an emergency. [1] Another rule is that the side carrying the year of minting is the obverse, although most Canadian coins, and all Japanese coins, are an exception. Pugachev's Cobra, an air combat manoeuvering technique. However, the rule is violated in some cases. Cobra (beer). The back side is called the reverse, or colloquially tails. Cobra (video game). Traditionally the side of a coin carrying a bust of a monarch or other authority, or a national emblem, is called the obverse, or colloquially heads. Cobra (programming language), a computer programming language in development from Idigicon. The monarch would have to periodically recall, paying only bullion value of the silver, and re-mint circulating coins. Rosenberger. This form of debasement in Tudor England led to the formulation of Gresham's Law. COBRA (novels), a series of ultra-violent spy novels written in the 1970s by Joseph R. Circulating unmilled British sterling silver coins were known to be shaved to almost half of their minted weight. Cobra (film), starring Sylvester Stallone. This is the reason some modern coins have ridges, known as "reeds," on their edges; the presence of reeding shows that the coin's edge has not been shaved. Cobra (manga), a manga and anime series. Prior to the use of milled edges, circulating coins suffered from "shaving," a common problem where unscrupulous persons would shave a small amount of precious metal from the edge of a circulating coin. Cobra (computer), a ZX Spectrum clone computer built in Romania. The milled, or reeded, edges still found on many coins were originally designed to show that none of the valuable metal had been shaved off the coin. Cobra (band), an all-female rock band from China. Increasingly common are coin counting machines which charge money to consumers for converting their "coins" into "cash". COBRA (avant-garde movement), a European art movement active around 1950. has never revised its coinage system to accommodate this inflation, and as a result, coins in America today are scarcely regarded as "money" in any practical sense. Cobra (snake), a venomous snake. What is unique to the United States, among the developed countries, is that the U.S. The United Kingdom saw similar inflation during the same era. Virtually every other country debased their coinage too. It also should not be inferred that such debasement and inflation were unique to the U.S. For example, in 1960, the silver in a dime was worth less than four cents. silver coinage, such coins were actually fiat money, because the value of silver was relatively low. It should be remembered, however, that for most of the era of U.S. Some consider a classic example of this phenomenon to be the behavior of price levels in the United States since 1964 (the last year circulating United States Coins were minted of 90 percent silver). Debasement of money almost always leads to price inflation unless price controls are also instituted by the governing authority. By replacing some fraction of a coin's precious metal content with a base metal (often copper or nickel), the intrinsic value of each individual coin was reduced (thereby "debasing" their money), allowing the coining authority to produce more coins than would otherwise be possible. Throughout history, governments have been known to create more coinage than their supply of precious metals would allow. For example, in 1979 and 1980, a Chinese architectural team excavating the region surrounding the ancient kingdom of Loulan discovered some Mesolithic stone tools and coins (see Loulan: Modern Chinese Expeditions). The history of coins is a long and interesting one. True coins also developed very close to this time frame in both India and China. Under three generations of Lydian kings, the money of Lydia gradually moved from being lumps of electrum (a naturally occurring alloy of silver and gold) to coins of a guaranteed weight and purity, marked with the seal of the King. By the above definition, the invention and first known usage of coins comes from the Kingdom of Lydia circa 643-630 B.C. These criteria are:. To distinguish between these two types of coins, as well as from other forms of tokens which have been used as money, monetary scholars have defined three criteria that an object must meet to be a "true coin". This means that the value of the coin is decreed by government fiat rather than agreed by the people, which really makes it less a coin and more a token in the strictest sense. However, in modern times, most coins are made of a base metal and their value comes strictly from their status as fiat money. The market exchange value of a coin comes from its historic value, and/or the intrinsic value of the component metal (for example gold coins, silver coins or platinum coins). See Coin collecting and Numismatics for more information on the collecting of coins, bank notes, token coins and Exonumia. . Coins are usually used for lower-valued units, and banknotes are usually used for the higher values; also, in most money systems, the highest value coin is worth less than the lowest-value note. Along with banknotes, coins make up the cash forms of all modern money systems. A coin is usually a piece of hard material, generally metal and usually in the shape of a disc, which is issued by a government to be used as a form of money. It must be marked to identify the authority that guarantees the content. It must be of a standardized weight and purity. It must be made of a valuable material, and trade for close to the market value of that material. |