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All coins that the US use. 50, 25, 10, 5, and 1 cent coins.
Current US denominations are: 1 cent, 5 cent, 10 cent, 25 cent, 50 cent & $1.00 coins.
No lead 1 cent coins were ever struck by the US. Zinc coated steel cents were struck in 1943 only.
The US has never made any silver 1 cent coins.
Assuming that they are current US coins, 2 Dimes and 1 Nickel. If they were obsolete denominations, they could also be a 20 Cent Coin, a 3 Cent Coin and a 2 Cent Coin.
1 cent. There are 100 to 1 dollar. 10 to dime, 25 to quarter.
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.
One 50-cent coin, two 10-cent coins, and two 1-cent coins.
The US NEVER made any gold 1 cent coins
Simple answer: 98 coins of 1 cent each.
Currently, there are the following denominations of US coins minted for circulation:1 cent coins (pennies)5 cent coins (nickels)10 cent coins (dimes)25 cent coins (quarters)1 dollar coins (the Native American and Presidential one dollar coins).While these are the only coins currently being produced for general use, there are a number of other coins such as commemorative coins and silver and gold coins that the Government is minting which have varying denominations. These include50 cent coins (half dollars, made of copper-nickel). Halves were minted for circulation until a few years ago but are now only made for collectors due to low demand."silver eagles" (1 oz of silver)"gold eagles" (0.10, 0.25, 0.50, and 1.00 oz of gold)"platinum eagles" (same weights as gold eagles)
2-cent coins were made of the same bronze alloy as 1-cent coins: 95% copper and 5% tin/zinc. Their weight was exactly twice that of a bronze cent, as well - 6.22 gm.