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90% silver, 10% copper up to 1964. Copper-nickel clad starting 1965.
4 quarters=10 dimes x quarters=85 dimes quarter=10/4 dimes x (10/4 dimes) = 85 dimes x= 85 dimes/(10/4 dimes) x=34 Answer: 34 quarters
2 quarters, 4 dimes and 3 pennies.2 quarters, 4 dimes and 3 pennies.2 quarters, 4 dimes and 3 pennies.2 quarters, 4 dimes and 3 pennies.
well it depends on how you want it. If you want it as, like having 4 quarters and counting one way for four quarters then counting another as having the same 4 quarters but in different order (if you understood any of that) there is 293 possibilities. but if you want it the other way, We can use either 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4 quarters. If we use 0 quarters, we can use from 0 up to 10 dimes, and the rest, if any, in nickels. That accounts for 11 ways. If we use 1 quarter, we can use from 0 up to 7 dimes, and the rest in nickels. That accounts for 8 ways. If we use 2 quarters, we can use from 0 up to 5 dimes, and the rest, if any, in nickels. That accounts for 6 ways. If we use 3 quarters, we can use from 0 up to 2 dimes, and the rest in nickels. That accounts for 3 ways. If we use 4 quarters, that's the whole dollar, so that accounts for 1 way. So the total number of ways = 11+8+6+3+1 = 29 You weren't asked to list them, but here is the list of all 29 ways: 1. 0 quarters, 0 dimes, and 20 nickels. 2. 0 quarters, 1 dime, and 18 nickels. 3. 0 quarters, 2 dimes, and 16 nickels. 4. 0 quarters, 3 dimes, and 14 nickels. 5. 0 quarters, 4 dimes, and 12 nickels. 6. 0 quarters, 5 dimes, and 10 nickels. 7. 0 quarters, 6 dimes, and 8 nickels. 8. 0 quarters, 7 dimes, and 6 nickels. 9. 0 quarters, 8 dimes, and 4 nickels. 10. 0 quarters, 9 dimes, and 2 nickels. 11. 0 quarters, 10 dimes, and 0 nickels. 12. 1 quarter, 0 dimes, and 15 nickels. 13. 1 quarter, 1 dime, and 13 nickels. 14. 1 quarter, 2 dimes, and 11 nickels. 15. 1 quarter, 3 dimes, and 9 nickels. 16. 1 quarter, 4 dimes, and 7 nickels. 17. 1 quarter, 5 dimes, and 5 nickels. 18. 1 quarter, 6 dimes, and 3 nickels. 19. 1 quarter, 7 dimes, and 1 nickel. 20. 2 quarters, 0 dimes, and 10 nickels. 21. 2 quarters, 1 dime, and 8 nickels. 22. 2 quarters, 2 dimes, and 6 nickels. 23. 2 quarters, 3 dimes, and 4 nickels. 24. 2 quarters, 4 dimes, and 2 nickels. 25. 2 quarters, 5 dimes, and 0 nickels. 26. 3 quarters, 0 dimes, and 5 nickels. 27. 3 quarters, 1 dime, and 3 nickels. 28. 3 quarters, 2 dimes, and 1 nickel. 29. 4 quarters, 0 dimes, and 0 nickels. Hope this helped!
To find the number of quarters and dimes in $9.25, we can use the fact that quarters are worth $0.25 and dimes are worth $0.10. If we let ( q ) represent the number of quarters and ( d ) represent the number of dimes, we can set up the equation: ( 0.25q + 0.10d = 9.25 ). However, without additional information about the specific numbers of quarters and dimes, there are multiple combinations that can satisfy this equation. For example, if there are 30 quarters ($7.50) and 17 dimes ($1.70), that would total $9.25.
Well, honey, if we're talking about quarters and dimes, there are actually 6 ways you can make $2.00. You can have 8 quarters and 0 dimes, 6 quarters and 2 dimes, 4 quarters and 4 dimes, 2 quarters and 6 dimes, 0 quarters and 10 dimes, or just a fancy mix of quarters and dimes. So, go ahead and make it rain with those coins!
2 quarters,4 dimes, and 3 pennies
None. If you "get 65 cents using only dimes nickels and quarters" you are not using any pennies!
If you want only quarters, divide 6 / 0.25. [24 quarters, 0 dimes] If you want only dimes, divide 6 / 0.1. [60 dimes, 0 quarters] If you want some combination of quarters and dimes, you can experiment a bit. For this specific problem, you'll need an even number of quarters to get the exact amount - so you can use zero quarters, 2 quarters, 4 quarters, etc.
In the US, we use pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters.
There are 2 solutions (if you include the non-use of quarters): 1 Quarter, 2 Dimes, 2 Nickels, 45 Pennies No Quarters, 2 Dimes, 8 Nickels, 40 Pennies
I would rather have a pound of quarters because they are worth more than dimes. A pound of quarters is worth $90, while a pound of dimes is only worth $36. The higher value makes quarters more desirable for practical use or exchange. Plus, they are easier to handle in larger denominations.