You didn't say whether you have individual coins, an uncirculated set, or a proof set.
If it's separate coins, as of 12/2008 the values are:
Half: $8.40
Quarter: $3.75
Dime: $1.75
Nickel: $0.20
Cent: $0.05
If it's an uncirculated set, the value of the full package is about $15 for a set from either Mint, Philadelphia or Denver.
If it's a proof set, $18.
the presidents
From least to greatest: Penny Nickel Dime Quarter Half Dollar Gold and Silver Dollar
There are thousands of coins in the US, but if you mean circulation coins, there is the penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, Native American dollar, and presidential dollar.
1955 d what? Penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half, or dollar. sorry. It is a penny If it happened to be a double die or struck twice when it was made, it could be up to A$1,500 in good condition. If it is just a regular penny, you can buy a new uncirculated one for $20. Much use or wear and it's probably just a penny.
Washington on the quarter and 1 dollar bill Jefferson on the 2 dollar bill Lincoln on the 5 dollar bill and penny Franklin on the 100 Grant on the 50 Jackson on the 20 Adams Sr. on the nickel
A penny is 1/5 of a nickel, 1/10 of a dime, 1/25 of a quarter and 1/100 of a dollar. A nickel is 1/2 of a dime, 1/5 of a quarter and 1/20 of a dollar. A dime is 2/5 of a quarter and 1/10 of a dollar. A quarter is 1/4 of a dollar.
Penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, dollar.
91/100 91%
dime
penny nickel dime quarter kennedy 1/2 dollar eisenhower silver dollar
1%, 5%, 10%, 25% respectively.
There are several American coins. They are the penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar and dollar.
the presidents
From least to greatest: Penny Nickel Dime Quarter Half Dollar Gold and Silver Dollar
Quarter: 24.26mm Nickel: 21.21mm Penny: 19.05mm
six pennies, a nickel and a penny, six cents, one one-hundredth of a dollar, one tenth of a penny, one quarter of a quarter.
You may measure them in inches but you cannot calculate them in inches.