Wiki User
∙ 15y agoIts a Dime and A nickel, because one is not a nickel but the other one is
Wiki User
∙ 15y agoOne is a nickel and one is a dime. The one that is NOT A NICKEL is the dime!
For American currency. You have two coins worth a total of 15 cents. One of the coins is not a nickel. What are they? The one that's not a nickel is a dime. The OTHER coin is a nickel.
A U.S Nickel is worth 5 cents ...
5 In U.S. currency a nickel is worth five cents.
One is not a nickel, it is a quarter. The other coin is a nickel.
One is a nickel and one is a dime. The one that is NOT A NICKEL is the dime!
Canadian coins aren't usable in the US. A Canadian nickel isn't worth anything in the US. IN Canada, the 2004 nickel is worth .05 cents. However, if you can sneak it into your change one day, you'll get .05 cents worth of stuff.
For American currency. You have two coins worth a total of 15 cents. One of the coins is not a nickel. What are they? The one that's not a nickel is a dime. The OTHER coin is a nickel.
A nickel is worth 5 cents, which is written as $0.05. Coins are all fractions of dollars.For example, a dime is worth 10 cents, and 10 cents is written $0.10..A quarter is worth 25 cents, written $0.25.
He has a US nickel and three US pennies.
It's 3 coins and is worth 55 cents
One is a quarter. One is a nickel. This way, one (the quarter) is not a nickel. You never said that both of them weren't nickels.
These coins are very common and are worth 5 cents.
Retail values are 10 to 20 cents for BU coins.
Technically nothing, because the nickel wasn't introduced until 1866. However, five cents in 1845 was worth five cents (which is about $1.40 in 2014).
Retail values are 10 to 20 cents for BU coins.
1 Quarter, 1 dime, 2 Nickel, 2 Pennies