'10p' is money, a 10 pence piece.
In the UK, from about 10p to about 40p.
An American dollar is 10p in the UK to find out more about money differences go to money/sex.com
An American dollar is 10p in the UK to find out more about money differences go to money/sex.com
the product of 10p (p–q) is 10p²-10pq Given: 10p (p–q) To find : the product of 10p (p–q) Solution: we have to find the product of 10p (p–q). so product of any number means the multiplication multiply (p–q). by 10p we get, =10p× (p–q) =10p×p-10p× q =10p²-10pq the product of 10p (p–q) is 10p²-10pq
The accepted range is 90-94, so an average of 92.
7p-10p = -3
30p = 20p + 5p + 5p 40p = 20p + 10p + 10p
0.1
I not sure as to the meaning of the question? The first five legal tender coins in the UK are: 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p (p meaning pence).
36 x 10p in £3.60
10p = 180 p = 18
15th February 1971, the UK introduced decimal currency