The four suits in a standard deck of playing cards is thought to have originated in the Middle East. The suits started out as being coins, cups, swords and sticks. These suits evolved into today's playing card suits with the coins now being diamonds; the cups, which stood for "love", turning into hearts; the spades replaced the swords, and the sticks are now clubs.
On the crafting table, put sticks on the left and right sides, and one in the very middle.
No, copper is not magnetic. However, some coins that appear to be copper are in fact made of steel (which is magnetic), coated with a thin layer of copper. Examples of this include British 1 and 2 pence coins minted in or after 1992; South African 1 and 2 cent coins minted in or after 199; and Canadian 1 cent coins minted in or after 1997.
That is 3 sticks
Throw away two sticks
Sticks of what? It depends on how heavy the sticks are.
A ten year old can collect bugs, coins, rocks, fossils, flowers, fish, sticks, sand, different color dirt, - virtually anything!
Drum sticks.
Sticks and stones; sticks and pricks. (The latter isn't as common.)
The collective noun is a bundle of sticks.
2 sticks of butter (packaged in 1/4 pound sticks) equals 1 cup6 cups is 12 sticks of butter or 3 pounds.
One way to know a coin is not silver is to check it with a magnet. If the magnet sticks to the coin, it is not silver. If the magnet does not stick, it still might not be silver. You can test it, but to do that you need a test kit.