50, 25, 10, 10, 10, 10, 1, 1, 1, 1. This is the largest total that can't make change for *any* amount.
nine
half dollar, quarter four dimes
One half dollar, one quarter, four dimes and four pennies. It equals $1.19. You can not make change for exactly one dollar with those coins
There are 293 ways to make change for a dollar using the coins of a penny thru 1/2 dollar
One half dollar, 1 Quarter, 4 dimes
Absolutely! Nearly all larger banks should have plenty of them - about 2 billion of the new "golden" (actually brass) dollars have been minted since 2000. Many larger cities also use them on their transit systems, and change machines will give change in $1 coins.
Dollar coins are larger in size and amount.
nine
Aside from the one dollar coin, other coins have a face value of less than one dollar. In the past, there were larger value coins, but they haven't been used since the 1930s.
half dollar, quarter four dimes
One half dollar, one quarter, four dimes and four pennies. It equals $1.19. You can not make change for exactly one dollar with those coins
Most banks and credit unions have the coins.
This question makes no sense. You could have an infinite amount of coins and make change for a dollar. For example, you could have 100 pennies, or 1,000,000 pennies, or 1,000,000,000 pennies and make change for a dollar.
There are 293 ways to make change for a dollar using the coins of a penny thru 1/2 dollar
263 ways
One half dollar, 1 Quarter, 4 dimes
The term "change" for coins comes from the idea of receiving back the balance of money after a transaction. It references the act of exchanging larger denomination bills for smaller coins as a form of financial exchange.