The cent symbol looks like a small letter "c" with a vertical line through it.
See the picture here :
http://www.decodeunicode.org/u+00A2/data/glyph/448x448/00A2.gif
Dan Moore
The Working Man's Rare Coins
http://www.workingmancoins.com
10 coins= 2 fifty cent coins.
75 cents can be made from 5 ten-cent coins, 3 five-cent coins, and 10 one-cent coins.
Germany uses coins that are based on the euro. There are two euro coins, one euro coins, 50 cent euros, 20 cent, 10 cent, 5 cent, and 1 cent euro coins.
Four 5 cent coins and three 10 cent coins.
"They" have not stopped making 20 cent coins.
There are 100 cents in the Australian Dollar. That can constitute - 20 x 5 cent coins. 10 x 10 cent coins. 5 x 20 cent coins. 2 x 50 cent coins. 1 x 1 Dollar coin. The 1 and 2 cent coins are no longer in circulation.
Current US denominations are: 1 cent, 5 cent, 10 cent, 25 cent, 50 cent & $1.00 coins.
Such a coin does not exist. There are 2 cent coins, Shilling coins and Two Shillings coins, but no 2 cent Shillings. The cent and the Shilling do not belong in the same currency.
Simple answer: 98 coins of 1 cent each.
Gold Coins: $20-$10-$5-$3-$2.50-$1.00 Silver coins: Dollar-Half Dollar-Quarter- 20 cent piece-Dime-Half Dime-3 cent silver. Copper Coins: 5 cent- 3 cent (nickel)- 2 cent- 1 cent- Half cent
it's possible only if there are 20 cent coins only for that 7 dollars 1 dollar = 100 cents, 100 cents = 5 of 20 cent coins since you need 5 of 20 cent coins for a dollar, you do 7 times of it. 7 X 5 = 35. Therefore, you need 35 of 20 cent coins for 7 dollars. (or there are 35 of 20 cent coins in 7 dollars)
No, as of yet there is no official word on the fate of US one cent coins.