2001 North Carolina & 2002 Ohio are the quarters with airplanes.
Please post a new question. All quarters minted in 1890 were Seated Liberty quarters with a picture of Miss Liberty on the front and an eagle on the back. If your coin is one of the new State Quarters, it has TWO dates on it: the admission date for the state being honored is at the top of the coin's reverse, and the minting date is at the bottom. But Michigan was admitted to the Union in 1837 so if you have its State quarter it wouldn't have 1890 at the top.
No, three quarters is more than two quarters.
There are 2 quarters in 2 quarters.
33.333%.This can be calculated in two different ways:1) The likelihood of the first coin being a state quarter is 2 out of 3, or 66.666%. The likelihood of the second coin being a state quarter is 1 out of 2 (since there are now only two coins to pick from, one a state quarter and the other not), or 50.000%. The likelihood of them both being state quarters is then 66.666% x 50.000%, which equals 33.333%.2) This is the same question as "what is the likelihood that the coin not chosen is not a state quarter?", which is 1 out of 3, or 33.333%.
Two quarters equal a half.
11 quarters
With the dates of 1987 & 1992 they can't be State Quarters first year for state quarters was 1999. If the coins have Washington's Head on both sides they're novelty coins and have no collectible value at all.
Two quarters = 50 cents.
There are four quarters in two halves. Since one half consists of two quarters, multiplying that by two gives you four quarters. Therefore, 2 halves equal 4 quarters.
Two quarters of seven hundred is 350.
Three fourths is three quarters One half is two quarters. Three quarters is greater than two quarters.
Oh, dude, you're really testing my math skills here. So, like, two and a half is the same as two plus a half, which is like two quarters plus a half a quarter, which is like 2 and a half quarters. So, like, technically, there are 2 and a half quarters in two and a half. But who's counting, right?