Yes. They are available on the US mint site. They offer mostly uncirculated and proofs.
Some larger banks may also have them or be able to order rolls for you.
Current US denominations are: 1 cent, 5 cent, 10 cent, 25 cent, 50 cent & $1.00 coins.
There is no straightforward answer, you can make it with 50 or 45 coins quite easily if you use 50 one-cent coins or 49 one-cent coins and a 5-cent coin. You could bend the meaning of the question using non-US currencies, or by trading, etc.
All coins that the US use. 50, 25, 10, 5, and 1 cent coins.
With US coins, a half-dollar and two nickels, or two quarters and a dime. If you have 20-cent coins, 3 of those, or the 50 cent and two 5 cent coins.
Lincoln 1 cent , Indian Head 5 cent , Winged Liberty Head 10 cent , Washington 25 cent , Walking Liberty 50 cent , Peace 1$ , Oregon Trail Commemorative 50 cent , Maryland Tercentenary Commemorative 50 cent , Texas Independence Commemorative 50 cent , and the Daniel Boone Bicentennial Commemorative 50 cent.
Three half-dollars (three 50-cent coins). In US coins, a dollar and two quarters (dollar coins are not well-circulated).
Half Cents were produced by the US Mint from 1793 through 1857.
It depends on the country you're referring to. The US and Canada make 50-cent coins, but they rarely circulate, while in other countries (such as Australia and New Zealand), they circulate regularly.
EU 50 cent coins are common in circulation, unlike the half-dollar in the US. At the exchange rate in effect in early 2010 it's worth about 70¢ US,
No, as of yet there is no official word on the fate of US one cent coins.
Coins showing heavy wear sell for 5 to 15 cents better grade coins are 50 cents to $1.00 Mint state coins can sell for $5.00 or more
Depending on grade, retail values are 50 cents to $3.00 for coins in average circulated condition.