FACTOID # 124: Teachers make up 7.8 percent of Iceland’s labor force - and they only have to teach 38 weeks per year.
 
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Encyclopedia > Coining

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Coin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1140 words)
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.
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.
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.
Coin Costa del Sol Spain by Coin-Andalucia.to (312 words)
Coin is situated in the fertile valley of the rio Grande approx 21 Km inland from Marbella and there is little doubt that a community of some kind existed on the spot long before the Roman conquest.
Coin is located in an area acknowledeged as an excellent golfing area, and boasts more Coin activities than you could imagine.
Coin's main Coin attractions include its title as the Town of the Fountains, due to the large number of public fountains around the streets and squares, used until relatively recently as the only source of drinking water in the town.
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