This is a quarter.
a half coin and two quarters
Each coin is a half-dollar. If you have five coins that equal 50 cents, then you have five half-dollars. Each half-dollar equals 50 cents.
no 50% i equal to one half
One-half is equal to 0.5
Mathematically speaking, it means nothing. FAIRLY EQUAL is not half. Half is EXACTLY equal.
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A half dollar
a half coin and two quarters
. john kenndey
In 1843, Queen Victoria had not been long on throne and the Great Recoinage had taken place in 1817 standardising Britain's coins to certain metals, dimensions and weights for specific denominations. British coins in general circulation at that time, but not necessarily minted in 1843, would include - Sovereign - Equal to One Pound or 20 Shillings. A 22 carat gold coin. Half-Sovereign - Equal to Half a Pound or 10 Shillings. A 22 carat gold coin. Crown - Equal to Five Shillings. A .925 fine silver coin. Halfcrown - Equal to Two Shillings and Sixpence. A .925 fine silver coin. Shilling - Equal to 12 Pence. A .925 fine silver coin. Sixpence - Equal to 6 Pence. A .925 fine silver coin. Groat - Equal to 4 Pence. A .925 fine silver coin. Threepence - Equal to 3 Pence. A .925 fine silver coin. Twopence - Equal to 2 Pence. A .925 fine silver coin. Three-Halfpence - Equal to One and a Half Pence. A .925 fine silver coin. Penny - 12 Pence to a Shilling and 240 Pence to a Pound. A copper coin. Halfpenny - Half of a Penny. A copper coin. Farthing - Quarter of a Penny. A copper coin. Half-Farthing - Half of a Farthing. A copper coin. Each coin for each metal type becomes progressively smaller. In 1817, the gold Guinea coin of 21 Shillings and its fractional denominations, had been replaced by the Sovereign and Half-Sovereign. The Florin of Two Shillings, was Britain's first step towards decimalisation, being 1/10th of a Pound, and was to be issued in the next 5 years.
Each coin is a half-dollar. If you have five coins that equal 50 cents, then you have five half-dollars. Each half-dollar equals 50 cents.
It's simply called a half dollar.
...Of what US coin? There have been several US coins intended for circulation ranging from half a cent to $20.
The actual wording of this puzzle is "What two coins equal 55 cents if one of them is not a nickel?"The answer of course is a half dollar and a nickel. The half is the coin that's not a nickel.
Half dollar and a nickel. (A bit of a waste given that half dollars are only minted for collectors now, as they were the last silver coin to be minted in large numbers, which meant everyone hoarded them, which means people stopped using them for day to day transactions, which meant that the quarter replaced it as the coin of choice.)
Penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, dollar.
50 pence was equal to 10 shillings in the pre-decimal currency. When Britain was on the gold standard, it was equal to a half-sovereign, a small gold coin equal to half of a pound (or 10 shillings since there were 20 shillings in the pound). After the end of the gold standard, it was largely replaced with the 10 shilling note until decimalisation when it was replaced with the 50p coin.