A small silver coin.
Yes.
You may write it like this: forty-five thousand seven hundred and thirty-four cents. If you convert to dollars, it would look like this: four hundred fifty-seven dollars and thirty-four cents.
Well, honey, you've got yourself a math problem. To make 85 cents using those coins, you can have combinations like 1 fifty cent coin, 1 twenty-five cent coin, 1 five cent coin, and 1 five cent coin. That's just one way to do it, but there are multiple combinations you can come up with to make a total of 85 cents using those coins.
Andrew Dart has compiled a nice history of postage rates in the US since 1863. See the related link below. Looks like a one-ounce letter could be sent for 2 cents until 1932, 3 cents thereafter.
The number 45 is written forty-five.
Please post a new and clearer question. A 50¢ coin is a HALF dollar. A silver dollar, like all dollars, is 100 cents.
The ice cream is 39 cents an ounce. This includes ice cream and any toppings you like. A waffle cone costs fifty cents.
Shillings are more like cents. There are 20 shillings in a pound, just like there are 100 cents in a dollar. This way, shillings are more like cents.
it look like a fifty sided shape
A fifty-cent piece.
The "cents" symbol looks like this: ¢
well you can sell all kinds of candy at school like candy bars but your grandma might make you run for three ours straight and a couple days later you will have a siezure