Silver LUCKY Coin Irish Shamrock Green 4 Leaf Clover Medal Rainbows End Palau
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Silver LUCKY Coin Irish Shamrock Green 4 Leaf Clover Medal Rainbows End Palau:
$18.03
\"Ounce of Luck\"
Lucky CoinThis is a Silver Plated Coin with a Four Leaf Clover with the words
\"Better an Ounce of Luck than a Pound of Gold\"
The back has the words \"Republic of Palau\" $5 and \"Rainbows End\"
It also has a image of a boat and King Neptune and a Mermaid near a Treasure Chest40mm and Weights about an ounceCould to Bring Luck to AnyoneGive it as a Birthday Present or Someone about to take an Exam or Driving TestOr Just Keep it yourself and buy a lottery ticket and who knows what will happen next ... It could be you !!!It is in Excellent Condition
Starting at onePenny...With ..If your the only buyer you win it for 1p....Grab a Bargain!!!!
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Luck can be accident or chance.[9]
Luck applies to a sentient being.Some examples of luck: Finding a valuable object or money
Winning an event despite negative logical assumptions
You correctly guess an answer in a quiz which you did not know.
Avoiding an accident at the last moment
Being born in a wealthy familyBefore the adoption of luck at the end of the Middle Ages, Old English and Middle English expressed the notion of \"good fortune\" with the word speed (Middle English spede, Old English spēd); speed besides \"good fortune\" had the wider meaning of \"prosperity, profit, abundance\"; it is not associated with the notion of probability or chance but rather with that of fate or divine help; a bestower of success can also be called speed, as in \"Christ be our speed\" (William Robertson, Phraseologia generalis, 1693).The notion of probability was expressed by the Latin loanword chance, adopted in Middle English from the late 13th century, literally describing an outcome as a \"falling\" (as it were of dice), via Old French cheance from Late Latin cadentia \"falling\". Fortuna, the Roman goddess of fate or luck, was popular as an allegory in medieval times, and even though it was not strictly reconcilable with Christian theology, it became popular in learned circles of the High Middle Ages to portray her as a servant of God in distributing success or failure in a characteristically \"fickle\" or unpredictable way, thus introducing the notion of chance.