There is only one combination of two coins that will equal 11 cents. That would be one dime and one penny. Since the question limits us by stating that one coin is not a penny, then clearly the OTHER coin *must* be a penny.
You use 1 nickel and 1 dime. One of them is not a dime; it is a nickel.
A half dollar and a nickel. The question said that only one was not a nickel. So $0.50 plus $0.05 equals $0.55.
One is a nickel and 'the other' is a quarter.
1 dime & 1 nickel !... you didn't say NO coin had to be a nickel !
10 cents and 5 cents
Two dimes, five nickels, and one penny.
The coin that is not a penny is a quarter. The other one IS a penny.
penny dime quarter
Two quarters, two dimes, two nickels, and one penny.
Three quarters, two dimes, one penny.
A fifty cent piece and a nickel equals 55 cents. If it's a riddle stating, "I have two coins that equals 55 cents, and one is not a nickel", the answer is still a fifty cent coin and a nickel. One is not a nickel, but the other one is.
A penny and a two cent coin. (The two-cent coin was produced in the United States from 1864-1873)
The answer is four nickels, two quarters, and five pennies equals seventy cents. I had help!
In U.S. or Canadian money, it's one quarter (25 cents), two dimes (2x 10 cents), and one penny (1 cent).
You need 3 coins- the 50 cent piece, a dime, and a penny.
to make 21 cents there are many ways 21 pennies 2 two dims and 1 penny 3 4 nickels and 1 penny 4 1 dim 2 nickels and 1 penny
A quarter plus a quarter is a half. In U.S. coins, two quarters equals 50 cents.