Quarter Horse
Quarter Horse
you give to the janater when he said what are you doing here then he will give you a dime.
A boy was at a carnival and went to a booth where a man said to the boy, "If I write your exact weight on this piece of paper then you have to give me $50, but if I cannot, I will pay you $50." The boy looked around and saw no scale so he agrees, thinking no matter what the carny writes he'll just say he weighs more or less. In the end the boy ended up paying the man $50. How did the man win the bet?
There are two possible solutions: You could have one quarter, two dimes, two nickels and forty-five pennies, or you could have two dimes, eight nickels and forty pennies. An easy way of approaching this problem is to start by imagining that you have fifty pennies. You have the right number of coins, but are fifty cents short. Instead of adding other coins, you replace pennies with them: replacing a penny with a nickel gains four cents, a dime gains nine, and a quarter gains twenty-four. You can't possibly use more than two quarters, so there are few cases to consider there: If you replace two pennies with quarters, you've gained forty-eight cents, so you only need two more; but any further replacement will give you too much. If you use one quarter, you need to make up twenty-six more cents in steps of four or nine; it's easy to see that two of each works. Finally, with no quarters, you need to gain fifty cents using increments of four or nine; this yields the second solution.
When I visited the reconstruction of the Globe theatre in London, I was told that they are referred to as Groundlings. I have also heard that the actors sometimes referred to them as 'Penny Stinkards', but I can't give a good source to confirm this.
the answer for HI2 is Quarter Horse
Quarter Horse
16 pennies, 3 nickels 1 penny,1 dime 1 nickel and one penny so 3 ways
My breed is made up of a man's name + the letter s + another mans name. What am I?A: ClydesdaleA royal's crown, but not worn on the horse's head.A: CoronetI am not worth a penny, I am not worth a dime, give me five nickels and I'll be worth your time.A: Quarter Horse
Yep, Democrats want to give the dime away, and the Republicans want the people to earn it.
Each and every dime is worth 10¢
A typical run-of-the-mill 1975 dime is worth $0.10. A rare specimen might be worth more, but since you didn't give us any distinguishing characteristics, we can't help you.
You can get a penny candy with it. Or you can make a hobo's day if you give it to him/her.
It's impossible to give a specific answer without knowing the date.
You almost scared me with this one, but I'll give it a go. Easy ones first: (1) 3 quarters (2) 7 dimes; 1 nickel (3) 15 nickels Then it gets tricky: (4) 2 quarters, 5 nickels (5) 2, quarters, 2 dimes, 1 nickel (6) 1 more time to convert 1 dime into 2 nickels (7) 1 quarter, 10 nickels (8) 1 quarter, 5 dimes (9-12) 4 more times to convert each dime, but 1, into 2 nickels (13-18) 6 more times to convert each dime, but 1, into 2 nickels. Did I miss any? 18 different ways (thank goodness you didn't include pennies!)
It is worth about $24, but a dealer probably wont give that for it for he needs to make a profit on it also!
you would be lucky to find anyone to give you anything for it. US coins have little value - even quarters. To be a bit more specific, at current (07/2009) exchange rates a common 1994 U.S. dime would be worth all of 6p, and a U.S. quarter would be worth a massive 15p!