A quarter and a dime
quarter and a dime (the other coin is a dime).
To make 35 cents in change using five coins, you can use 2 dimes (20 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 2 pennies (2 cents). This combination totals 35 cents. Alternatively, you could also use 3 dimes (30 cents) and 1 nickel (5 cents).
Two dimes, a nickel, and 10 pennies. A good question is how do you figure that out. I started out eliminating the coins that could not be included. If one coin was a quarter, the other 12 had to add up to 10 cents. That can't happen so there can't be any quarters in the answer. Then I knew that the number of pennies had to be 0, 5, or 10 since there is no way for the remaining dimes and nickels to to add up to 35 cents if there were another number of pennies. If you had 5 pennies, then 8 coins would have to add up to 30 cents. Even using all nickels would only use up 6 coins so there had to be more pennies. I then went to 10 pennies and that left 3 coins to get to 25 cents. That's where I came up with 2 dimes, 1 nickel, and 10 pennies.
3 dimes and a nickel
3 quarters is 75 cents. Now add 5 nickels which is 25 cents. The total is 75+35 which is one dollar as desired.This could be done with algebra also, but sometimes it is easier to do it by trial and error.
a Dime. 10 cents
quarter and a dime (the other coin is a dime).
One of the coins is not a dime (it is a quarter), but the other one is a dime.
If you mean U.S. coins, that would be 25 cents, 5 cents, and 5 cents.
To make 35 cents in change using five coins, you can use 2 dimes (20 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 2 pennies (2 cents). This combination totals 35 cents. Alternatively, you could also use 3 dimes (30 cents) and 1 nickel (5 cents).
Two dimes, a nickel, and 10 pennies. A good question is how do you figure that out. I started out eliminating the coins that could not be included. If one coin was a quarter, the other 12 had to add up to 10 cents. That can't happen so there can't be any quarters in the answer. Then I knew that the number of pennies had to be 0, 5, or 10 since there is no way for the remaining dimes and nickels to to add up to 35 cents if there were another number of pennies. If you had 5 pennies, then 8 coins would have to add up to 30 cents. Even using all nickels would only use up 6 coins so there had to be more pennies. I then went to 10 pennies and that left 3 coins to get to 25 cents. That's where I came up with 2 dimes, 1 nickel, and 10 pennies.
3 dimes and a nickel
a quarter and a dime (25c+10c=35c)
The answer depends on the currency. The choice of coins for US cents is different to that for Euro cents, so the answer will be different.The answer depends on the currency. The choice of coins for US cents is different to that for Euro cents, so the answer will be different.The answer depends on the currency. The choice of coins for US cents is different to that for Euro cents, so the answer will be different.The answer depends on the currency. The choice of coins for US cents is different to that for Euro cents, so the answer will be different.
it's possible only if there are 20 cent coins only for that 7 dollars 1 dollar = 100 cents, 100 cents = 5 of 20 cent coins since you need 5 of 20 cent coins for a dollar, you do 7 times of it. 7 X 5 = 35. Therefore, you need 35 of 20 cent coins for 7 dollars. (or there are 35 of 20 cent coins in 7 dollars)
3 quarters is 75 cents. Now add 5 nickels which is 25 cents. The total is 75+35 which is one dollar as desired.This could be done with algebra also, but sometimes it is easier to do it by trial and error.
Sure thing, honey. If one coin isn't a dime, then it must be a quarter. The other coin must be a dime. A quarter plus a dime equals 35 cents. Math doesn't lie, darling.