1 Quarter, 1 dime, 2 Nickel, 2 Pennies
To make 47 cents using six coins, you can use the following combination: 1 quarter (25 cents), 1 dime (10 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 4 pennies (4 cents). This totals 25 + 10 + 5 + 4 = 44 cents. However, if you strictly want six coins, you might use 1 quarter, 2 dimes, 1 nickel, and 2 pennies, which equals 47 cents.
1 Quarter 2 Nickels 2 Pennies 1 Dime.
6-19-11>>> So common most are worth 3 cents up to a dime for circulated coins with uncirculated coins at 25 to 50 cents
The 6 coins that would be equal to 47 cents, would be one quarter, one dime, two nickels, and two pennies. There is no other way to make this with six coins.
6-26-11>>> So many were struck, most circulated coins are 3 to 5 cents and typical uncirculated coins are only 50 to 75 cents.
To make 85 cents using 6 coins, you can use 3 quarters (75 cents), 1 dime (10 cents), and 1 nickel (5 cents). This combination totals 85 cents while using exactly 6 coins.
These coins are worth an average of 2 to 6 cents in circulated grades. They can easily be acquired from pocket change.
1 quarter 25cents 1 dime 10 cents 4 nickel 20 cents 6 pennies 6 cents 12 coins 51 cents
To make 89 cents with 6 coins, you have to first realize that the "9" part of the cents is comprised of 5 cents and 4 pennies. Therefore, you have to have 4 pennies and 85 cents using 2 coins; impossible, since you would need 3 coins(if you had half-dollars) to make that amount: a half-dollar, quarter, and a dime. Basically, it's impossible with only coins worth 0.01, 0.05, 0.10, 0.25, and 0.50 of the currency(US$, I assume?)
To calculate (63)47 cents, we must first determine the operation indicated by the parentheses. In mathematics, parentheses typically denote multiplication. Therefore, we would multiply 63 by 47 to find the total amount in cents. Multiplying 63 by 47 results in 2961 cents.
no
5 of 10 Cents = $0.50 1 of 50 Cents = $0.50 6 total = $1.00