You can use 7 nickels and 2 pennies.
A quarter, a nickel, a dime, and a penny is only 41 cents ... not enough to make 75 cents in even one way.
Yes, you can make seventy-four cents with nine coins: quarter, quarter, dime, nickel, nickel, penny, penny, penny, penny
There are ten cents in a dime. 1 = cent = 'penny' 5 = nickel 10 = dime 100 = dollar
You would have to use a half dollar coin (which is not common) along with 1 dime, 1 nickel, and 1 penny
There is only one combination of two coins that will equal 11 cents. That would be one dime and one penny. Since the question limits us by stating that one coin is not a penny, then clearly the OTHER coin *must* be a penny.
two quarters, a dime, a nickel, and a penny.
Penny- 2.41 cents Nickel- 11.18 Dime- 5.65 Quarter- 11.14 1$ coin- 18.03 Its absurd considering it cost twice as much to make a penny and a nickel then what they are worth.
a penny is worth a cent. so pretty much it is a cent. and a quarter is 25 cents and a dime is 10 cents and a nickel is 5 cents ...
The answer is three quarter's, one nickel's dime and a penny!
A quarter is 25 cents. A dime is 10 cents. A nickel is 5 cents and a penny is 1 cent. 2 quarters = 50 cents 2 dimes = 20 cents 1 nickel = 5 cents 1 penny = 1 cent 2 quarters, 2 dimes, 1 nickel and 1 penny equals 76 cents.
it depends on which one like nickel:5 cents quarter:25 cents penny:1 cent dime:10 cents
A dime, a nickel, and a penny (10 cents plus 5 cents plus 1 cent = 16 cents)