it will cost 2$.
This is easiest to see when you use a proportion. The thinking when using a proportion goes like: If 2 liters of soda costs .80 cents, then 5 liters costs x cents/dollars. The two parts would then be equal to each other. Mathematically you would use: (2 / .80) = (5 / x) x = 2 5 L of soda costs $2
twenty-five cents; smilarly, "four bits" is fifty cents
Cents are usually divided only to find a unit cost in manufacturing. The value would be written out "five and seven-hundredths cents." If this is US currency, the cents are the decimal part of the value. The spelling of $5.07 is "five dollars and seven cents."
If a pea cost ten cents and you buy five of them, you will spend $0.50 cents on the peas. If you have $1.00 and spend $0.50 you would have $0.50 left.
five cents
30 cents
I don't know for sure, but I think the average cost for a candy bar was around 5 cents.
The cost of a gallon of milk in 1907 was between twenty-five cents to thirty-one cents. Variations in the price depended on what part of the country you were in.
Five cents.
Five cents.
like five cents....
Five cents/page