The English Pound is comprised of one hundred pence. Therefore ten pence would require ten pennies and to reach one pound you would need ten 'ten-pence' coins.
Accordingly, to achieve one pound or £1 Sterling in twenty pence coins you would need five coins. Finally, 15 twenty pence coins would equal £3 or Three pounds.
Britain's coins are comprised 1p (penny) 2p (tuppence), 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p then
£1 (one Pound) and £2 (two pound coins)
We do not have £1 notes or 'bills' as Americans call them. However, in Scotland they are still in circulation. Scottish currency is interchangeable between England and Scotland...however occasionally some individuals can, for whatever reason, be reluctant to accept them.
Our notes comprise of:
£5, £10, £20, and £50. There are no larger notes. This is for an important reason; specifically to help control and monitor money laundering.
100
100
30p = 20p + 5p + 5p 40p = 20p + 10p + 10p
10 because if you count up in two's it goes- 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 So 10 times
One whole quantity of something is made up of 10 tenths of it.
144
3 feet make up a yard
How many 20ps do I need to make up£2
50 10p coins
16 ounces make up a pound.
There are many liters that can make up a pound. This really just depends on what the liters consist of.
England's currency is the pound. A pound is made up of 100 pennies. There are coins of different amounts:1p,2p,5p,10p,20p,50p,£1, and £2.
30p = 20p + 5p + 5p 40p = 20p + 10p + 10p
One pound is comprised of sixteen (16) ounces.
3,500 calories.
12 ounces
Calories are energy units, pounds are force units. You can't convert one into another.
Inches and pounds are not equivalent units.
1,500 Ten Pound notes would add up to 15,000 Pounds.