Tentatively I will say $4.35, with for instance: 19 x 20c 1 x 50c 1 x 5c It's possible that a rigorous method exists, but this is just a fudged guess. Any advances on it?
If you have 3 quarters, 4 dimes, and 4 pennies, you have $1.19. You also have the largest amount of money in coins without being able to make change for a dollar.
There are fifty million (50,000,000) 20 dollar bills in a billion dollars.
10 dimes to one dollar. Divide 700 by 10. You have $70.
The answer is 4000 dollars.
then you split that 5 dollars into 3 equal portions, although relatively it wont come out equally but you just make it as even as possible
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Without knowing the series (date) and condition, the best possible answer for now is two dollars.
Without knowing any additional details (such as the series date), the best possible answer is 20 dollars.
The largest percentage of the federal government dollar goes to the Department of Defense. The Department of Defense gets billions of dollars for its budget every year.
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All Morgan dollars have the same reverse design, with only a few very minor variations. None were minted without the words ONE DOLLAR. It's possible you have a copy, replica, or counterfeit but it would have to be examined in person to know for sure.
The largest amount of US coinage that one can hold without having change for a dollar is $1.19, comprised of: 3 quarters (or 1 half dollar and 1 quarter), 4 dimes, and 4 pennies
No picture is possible because the last Morgan dollars were dated 1921.
All S-mint Kennedy half dollars were struck as proofs. Without knowing the specific date it's not possible to put a value on the coin.
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The central bank of Japan frequently buys dollars to keep the dollar as strong as possible. The are economic and political reasons for this.
Dollar salting occurs when dollars are removed from the Philippines without approval from the Central Bank and transferred to an account outside the county.