3 kilos is 6.61 pounds.
1 lb is 0.454 kg, you do the math.
31/16 pounds equates to 1.4 (1.38913) kilos.
There are 1000 grams in a kilo. So, this means 3 kilos contain 3000 grams, which, if divided in packs of 50 grams, we will have 60 units of 50 grams.
15.87 To arrive at the answer, use the formula:35 lbs* 1 kg 2.2046 lbs = 15.87573295 kg
Approx 6.6 pounds.
The yellow coins are worth 1, the red coins are worth 2, and the blue coins are worth 3.
There is a one pound coin and a two pound coin but not a three pound coin.
Assuming current US coins, she has a half dollar, a quarter and a nickel.
3 nickels and a penny
If you mean "How do you make the worth of a quarter with 3 coins", the answer is: two dimes and one nickel.
Your question is confusing although I will attempt to answer it. In 1983 pound coins were introduced. The old Sir Isaac Newton £1 note was phased out. In mint condition these notes can fetch £3 - £5.
No coins is worth 1 cent in England. "Cents" are not used in the UK (of which Britain is part). The currency of the UK is the pound (symbol: £, abbreviation: GBP), divided into 100 pence. So: £1 = 100p
1.36 kilos is 3 pounds.
3 kilos is 6.61 pounds.
Assuming you're referring to pre-decimal British coins, there were 20 shillings to the pound. That means each equates to 5 pence so 27s = £1.35 "Thrupence" was one of the many regional pronunciations for "Threepence". There were 2-penny coins popularly called "tuppence" and 3-penny coins nicknamed "thruppence". A pound was 240 old pence so depending on which coin you're describing, twenty of them would be worth either : > 2d: 40/240 of a pound, or about £0.17 > 3d: 60/250 of a pound, or £0.25
Only mint condition Uncirculated and Proof coins in the original packaging might have a value of Three Pounds, otherwise, 10 Pence coins are worth 10 Pence.