You see, by law, every American coin includes the latin phrase “E Pluribus Unum”. This phrase is typically translated to “Out of many, one.” During the run-up to the Revolutionary War, this phrase was ...
E pluribus unum is the traditional motto of America familiar to anyone who looks closely at our coins, currency or passport covers. These Latin words, meaning “out of many, one,” referred to the unity ...
Freshly-made pennies gleam under the lights as they sit in a bin at the U.S. Mint in Denver on Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2007. Because of a surge in the price of zinc and copper, it now costs the U.S. Mint ...
Our unofficial national motto is e pluribus unum, but Jim Mcclellan finds neither pluribus nor unum in our political discourse. I have always loved the Latin phrase on our currency, e pluribus unum.
As credit and debit cards increasingly displace cash as the preferred currency, our opportunities to encounter the traditional motto of the United States are vanishing. Even those still carrying a ...
“E Pluribus Unum” will be on display in the Visitor Center at the Frontier Culture Museum through March 31, 2024. Courtesy of the Augusta County Circuit Court of the Clerk’s Office. The Augusta County ...
Aug. 10 (UPI) --On this date in history: In 1776, a committee of Benjamin Franklin, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson suggested the United States adopt "E pluribus unum" -- "Out of many, one" -- as the ...
I'm sure I recognize the place. The question is what happened to it? You remember us: We're the ones who showed all the other people of the world how to be a democracy. And now our own is slipping. We ...