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Modern Collecting
MOC Does not mean Mint Condition
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<blockquote data-quote="Michael Sith" data-source="post: 537253" data-attributes="member: 4511"><p>Mint on card MOC ( Mint figure on card, unopened bubble) is how I read MOC </p><p></p><p>Hence descriptions like LFB MOC - some veigning to card, price sticker residue and small ding to bubble</p><p></p><p>If MOC was referring to mint figure, bubble and card it would be MOCBC or something like that</p><p></p><p>If someone is negging because an item is referred to as MOC then they are complaining about a ding bubble or the state of the card, then they are either trying it on or they are just daft ( especially if you describe as moc " some veigning to card" etc </p><p>Common sense</p><p></p><p>However MOC is as I understand it a generally accepted description it's not a Legal term of description.</p><p></p><p>Also if we are being pedantic then the word Mint in this context in the English language is an idiom anyway!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Michael Sith, post: 537253, member: 4511"] Mint on card MOC ( Mint figure on card, unopened bubble) is how I read MOC Hence descriptions like LFB MOC - some veigning to card, price sticker residue and small ding to bubble If MOC was referring to mint figure, bubble and card it would be MOCBC or something like that If someone is negging because an item is referred to as MOC then they are complaining about a ding bubble or the state of the card, then they are either trying it on or they are just daft ( especially if you describe as moc " some veigning to card" etc Common sense However MOC is as I understand it a generally accepted description it's not a Legal term of description. Also if we are being pedantic then the word Mint in this context in the English language is an idiom anyway! [/QUOTE]
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