The third U.S. President, Thomas Jefferson, is on the nickel. His home, Monticello, is on the back of the coin.
Thomas Jefferson.
President Thomas Jefferson has been on the US nickel since 1938.
Thomas Jefferson
jefferson
If you mean the metal, yes. If you mean the coin, no.
coin
That depends on what nickel you are talking about. Is it a US coin, a Canadian coin, what year is it? Compositions change both from country to country and from year to year. Try being more specific in your question, in order to get a proper answer.
solvent=copper 75% solute=nickel 25%
It is solid at standard temperatures and pressures.
5 cent coin: Brass-clad nickel 10 cent coin: Brass-clad nickel 50 cent coin: nickel-clad copper dollar coin: nickel-clad copper.
The USA refers to their 5 cent coin as a Nickel. Nickel (Ni) is an element with the atomic number 28.
Australia has never produced a "nickel" coin.
The nickel has an image of Thomas Jefferson.
Assuming American coinage, the two coins would be a 25 cent coin and a 5 cent coin. Assuming non-American coins, one is not a 10 cent coin, but the other one is. The other coin being a 20 cent coin.
You have to use a quarter and a nickel otherwise it's impossible.An Explanation ...This is a common brain teaser. If one coin isn't a nickel, it's the quarter. The other coin is the nickel.
A nickel is a five-cent United States coin. A dime is a ten-cent coin. Therefore, a nickel is half of a dime.
Australia does not have a "nickel" coin.
NICKEL
The one is a quarter and the other one is a nickel
Thomas Jefferson is represented on the United States nickel coin.
U.S. cents were never struck in nickel. If your coin is nickel- or silver-colored it was plated. That makes it an altered coin with no collector value.