User:(chubbstar)

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(chubbstar)
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Public domainThis user comes from Canada.
enThis user is a native speaker of the English language.
en-5This user can contribute with a professional level of English.
fr-1Cet utilisateur peut contribuer avec un niveau élémentaire de français.
la-1Hic usor simplici latinitate contribuere potest.
This user is a university student.
This user enjoys philosophy.
This user maintains a Facebook profile.
@This user can be reached by email.
This user is owned by one or more cats.
This user is an Aries.
This user eats sushi.
This user plays Pac-Man.
THIS USER'S HEAD ASPLODE.
"sometimes you cant hear me speak because trapped in parentheses." (chubbstar)talk | contrib | 23:50, 12 May 2006 (UTC)
"i have a user page now." (chubbstar)talk | contrib | 21:49, 18 April 2006 (EST)






Hiya.

I hope that one day wikipedia will gather all the knowable knowledge in the known universe, at which point i hope it considers changing its name to the Infosphere.

I've also vowed to read the article for every country in the world, by continent, in alphabetical order, at a minimum rate of three per week. You know, so i can understand where i live.

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Reverse of the double sovereign
Reverse of the double sovereign

The double sovereign is a gold coin of the United Kingdom with a nominal value of two pounds sterling (£2). It features the reigning monarch on its obverse and, most often, Benedetto Pistrucci's depiction of Saint George and the Dragon on the reverse (pictured). It was rarely issued in the first century and a half after its debut in 1820, usually in a new monarch's coronation year or to mark the institution of a new coinage portrait of the monarch. In addition to the usual coinage in Britain, specimens were struck at Australia's Sydney Mint in 1887 and 1902. Most often struck as a proof coin, the double sovereign has been issued for circulation in only four years, and few examples worn from commercial use are known. It is now a collector and bullion coin, and has been struck by the Royal Mint most years since 1980. In some years, it has not been issued and the Royal Mint instead placed gold versions of the commemorative £2 piece in the annual gold proof sets. (Full article...)

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