If by 30 cent, you mean a carat weight of .30, you can purchase such a diamond today on Blue Nile and pay between US$344 and US$1,064, depending on the cut, colour, clarity and exact carat weight that you want.
3%
The doubled die variety is worth $30-$50 in uncirculated condition. Any others are worth one cent.
(1,475 miles) times (30 cents) = 44,250 cent-miles, or 442.5 dollar-miles. Neither has any physical significance, and both are meaningless.
They would give you $15.35
30% of 230 is 69. Thus, if something costs 230 dollars and goes on sale for 30% off, it would cost 161 dollars.
You can buy a .30 carat diamond today from Blue Nile and pay from US$276 to US$964, depending on the clarity and colour you want. ('Cent' is not a common notation for a diamond's attributes and when it is used, it can mean 'point'.)
The weight of a diamond is measured in carats, not in cents. So, a 30 cent diamond would not be equivalent to any specific weight in carats. To determine the carat weight of a diamond, it would need to be weighed using a scale calibrated to measure carats.
30 per cent
30 cents
You are correct. A 30 dollar tent costs 30 dollars.
Cesium costs about $30/G
i think 30$
There is no New Zealand 30 cent coin.
A silver 1829 5 cent coin is worth between £30 and £80
it costs about 30 dollars. (U.S)
a hammock only costs from 20 to $30
It costs about $30-$40 at drum stores.