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Until the 1780s English printers used a letter that looked like a lowercase "f" for this letter |
S
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$2,000 |
DJ |
LETTER PERFECT |
2019-03-28 |
#7959 |
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Instead of a middle name, Harry Truman's parents gave him just this middle initial |
S
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$400 |
J |
LETTER PERFECT |
2016-07-01 |
#7335 |
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Random House says it's the medieval Roman numeral for 7; makes sense |
S
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$2,000 |
DJ |
LETTER PERFECT |
2011-11-17 |
#6249 |
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In 1901 the first wireless message sent overseas was just this one letter |
S
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$800 |
J |
LETTER PERFECT |
2007-05-14 |
#5231 |
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In the word seen here in 17th-century-style printing, the first letter isn't an F, but this |
S
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$600 |
J |
LETTER PERFECT |
2003-03-28 |
#4285 |
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Harry Truman didn't always use a period after this middle initial; it didn't stand for anything |
S
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$200 |
J |
LETTER PERFECT |
1991-05-07 |
#1552 |
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It can follow "U.S." or "H.M.", as in the case of the Pinafore |
S
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$100 |
J |
LETTER PERFECT |
1989-12-07 |
#1214 |
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In Gershwin title, letter which precedes "Wonderful" |
S
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$300 |
J |
LETTER PERFECT |
1986-12-25 |
#534 |