Yes, a nickel is half a dime!
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A dime is smaller than a nickel. A nickel is worth less than a dime. A dime has a ridged side, while a nickel is smooth and thicker.
You fail to understand the value of a nickel or a dime. A nickel is 5 cents. A dime is 10 cents. There are 2 nickels to make 1 dime.
US coins: Cent - 19.05 mm Nickel - 21.2 mm Dime - 17.9 mm Quarter - 24.3 mm Half - 30.1 mm Dollar (modern) - 26.5 mm
Both nickels and dimes are composed of Copper and Nickel. A dime, however, is 91.67% Copper and 8.33% Nickel, while a nickel is 75% Copper and 25% Nickel. Since Copper is a bit denser than Nickel, and a dime contains relatively more Copper, than a dime would be denser than a nickel.
A nickel is a five-cent United States coin. A dime is a ten-cent coin. Therefore, a nickel is half of a dime.
Half of a dime is a Nickel and the chemical symbol is Ni.Nickel - Chemical Symbol: Ni
dime
It is impossible, since no coin + half dollar = 5 cents besides a nickel. 1,5,10,25,50, $1 are the coin denominations of today. However, if you used a half dime, it could technically work out, as 50 half dollar + 5 half dime = 55 cents. A half dime is a coin worth 5 cents. A nickel today, is just a name for 5 cent coins. For example cent or penny is a name for a 1 cent piece as a dime is a name for a 10 cent piece etal. Todays nickel is made of copper and silver.
The reason is because the dime used to be made of silver, while the nickel has always been a copper/nickel blend. Silver is worth more, which is why the coin could be smaller, but worth more. There used to be a silver half-dime, but the coin was so small that it was replaced by the nickel.
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A dime is smaller than a nickel. A nickel is worth less than a dime. A dime has a ridged side, while a nickel is smooth and thicker.
A dime and a half dime (a coin last minted in 1873)You may be thinking of the brain teaser "What two coins make 15 cents if one of them is not a nickel?" The answer to that question is of course a dime and a modern nickel. The dime is the one coin that's not a nickel!
Penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, dollar.
A nickel equals 5 cents; the dime 10 cents. Two nickels equals one dime in value. So the nickel is 50% of the dime.
Franklin Roosevelt, the 32nd President of the United States, is on the dime. Thomas Jefferson, the 3rd President of the United States, is on the nickel. John Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States, is on the half dollar.
There are 2 ways of answering it, first is this is usually some form of a "trick question" where the answer is, "a half dollar and a nickel, because the half isn't a nickel". However, a more technical answer would be that you would have one half dollar and one half-dime (half dimes were minted from 1792-1873, they were small 90% silver coins half the weight of a dime, the nickel is much larger and started being minted in 1866 and is 75% copper and 25% nickel)