$0.01 = 15
$0.05 = 8
$0.10 = 2
$0.25 = 1
$0.50 = 0
.
0.15 + 0.40 + 0.20 + 0.25
= 0.55 + 0.45 = 1.00
15 + 8 + 2 + 1 = 26
.
15 cents
8 nickels
2 dimes
1 quarter
$0.01 = 10
$0.05 = 1
$0.10 = 1
$0.25 = 1
$0.50 = 1
.
0.10 + 0.05 + 0.10 + 0.25 + 0.50
= 0.15 + 0.35 + 0.50 = 1.00
10 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 = 14
.
10 cents
1 nickel
1 dime
1 quarter
1 half
One quarter and fifteen nickels equal a dollar.
3 quarters, 3 nickels, and 10 pennies.
9 dimes, 1 nickel, and 5 pennies
12 nickels, 4 dimes.
16 coins that equal exactly one dollar are 10 pennies,2quartars, and 4 dimes. Or 3 quarters,10 pennies, and 3 nickels.
It depends which currency you are working in.
You have to convert everything to cents:A dollar is 100 cents so 8/10 of a dollar is 80 cents (0.8 * 100)A nickel is 5 centsThen 80 cents divided by 5 cents = 16 coins
16 5-cents in a dollar.
One solution is 16 nickels and 2 dimes.
3 quarters 3 nickels and 10 pennies 25X3=75 5X3=15 1X10=10 75+15+10=100
4-16-11>> A 1900-O Morgan dollar is common, circulated coins are $33.00-$40.00, typical Mint State coins are $50.00-$60.00.
13 nickels, 1 half-dollar, 1 quarter, and 1 dime. 13 x 5=65 cents, 65 cents + 50 cents + 25 cents + 10 cents = 1.50 dollars using only 16 coins.Hope I helped :-)
One way for 16 Australian coins to equal 95 cents is as follows: * 13 5c coins and 3 10c coins 13 x 5 = 65 3 x 10 = 30 30 + 65 = 95 cents
Yes there is, but there are dozens of different coins. There are 28 bronze Five Dollar coins, individually or as a set. There are 16 fine silver Five Dollar coins, individually or as a set. There are 8 fine gold One Hundred Dollar coins, individually or as a set. A Google search using - sydney 2000 olympic coin collection - will get many results, but the images are usually not in place for very long and they are not of great quality.
Penny - 1.26 centsNickel - 7.7 centsDime - 4 centsQuarter - 10 centsDollar (Coins) - 16 centsHalf Dollar- 12 cents