US $5 coins were made of gold, not nickel. Please check again and post a new question with more information that might help to ID your coin.
It's 100% certain that you have an Indian head nickel, and not a Liberty head nickel. There are millions of the former, and only 5 of the latter. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1913 Indian head nickel?" for more information.
about 5$ but thats cool!
The 5 known examples of the 1913 Liberty Head nickel are each valued at more than One Million dollars.
It was known as the "V" Nickel (or Liberty Head Nickel) the obverse featured a personification of Liberty, the reverse had a wreath with a large "V" in it (the Roman numeral for 5)
Please check your bill and post a new question. The US didn't print any $5 bills dated 1913.
As a dollar is equal to 100 pennies and a nickel is equal to 5 a nickel is 5% of a dollar.
A nickel is 5 cents and a dollar is 100 cents, so a nickel is 5/100 or 5% of a dollar.
A nickel is 5 percent of a dollar.
You have to convert each coin to its value in cents. A nickel is 5 cents and a dollar is 100 cents, so a nickel is 5/100 of a dollar, or 5 percent.
1/20 of a dollar is a nickel. It's 5 cents.
One Nickel is 1/20 (or 0.05) of a dollar.
5%
5%
1/20 of a dollar is a nickel. It's 5 cents.
1/20 of a dollar is one nickel. It's 5 cents.
One nickel = 5 cents 5 cents/100 cents ( a dollar ) = 0.05 ------------ 0.05 * 100 = 5% ------------ all of these things are what a nickel is out of a dollar
If that's 1 dollar, a nickel is 5%.