One dollar is 20 nickels (100/5) so 50 dollars = 50*20 = 1000 nickels
Oh, dude, you're really making me do math? Alright, fine. There are 1,000 nickels in 50 dollars. Just divide 50 by 0.05 (the value of a nickel), and there you have it. But seriously, who carries around that many nickels?
Well honey, if you've got 1000 nickels, that's 1000 nickels times 5 cents each, which gives you a grand total of $50. So, if you're looking to make it rain with nickels, you better start with a fat stack of 1000 of those bad boys.
50 dollars (;
10 Pesos is equal to one dollar, therefore 100 pesos is equal to 10 dollars.
5 dollars Welcome
Two dollars is equal to 8 quarters, ten nickels is equal to 50 cents or two quarters. Eight plus two equals 10. Another way to find the answer is to think of dollars in terms of nickels. One dollar equals twenty nickels (5 x 20 = 100). So two dollars would equal 40 nickels. Add the ten nickels to the 40 nickels to get 50 nickels. A quarter equals five nickels (5 x 5 = 25). Then devide 50 by 5 to equal 10.
Nickel = 0.05 dollars 50 dollars/0.05 dollars = 1000 nickels
50.
50 nickels equal 240 it takes 10 quarters to equal 240
If that's 50,000 dollars, that's one million nickels.
Oh, dude, you're really making me do math? Alright, fine. There are 1,000 nickels in 50 dollars. Just divide 50 by 0.05 (the value of a nickel), and there you have it. But seriously, who carries around that many nickels?
50 in each box
Well honey, if you've got 1000 nickels, that's 1000 nickels times 5 cents each, which gives you a grand total of $50. So, if you're looking to make it rain with nickels, you better start with a fat stack of 1000 of those bad boys.
As of the current exchange rate, 1 yen is equivalent to 0.01 US dollars. Therefore, 250 yen is equal to 2.50 US dollars. Since a nickel is worth 0.05 US dollars, you could trade 2.50 / 0.05 = 50 nickels for 250 yen.
50 thousand dollars
A standard bank box of nickels contains $100 worth, which is 50 rolls at $2 each.
A nickel is 5 cents. 40 nickels are worth 40*5 = 200 cents, or $2.