There is 24 Cents per British shilling
Assuming you mean a British shilling, about 10 cents or so. 1948 shillings have no silver and are very common.
In old money 48 farthings = 12 pence which was worth one shilling in British currency.
Five one cents equal 5 cents.
Assuming that you mean "How many cents are in one million dollars?", the answer is one hundred million (or 100,000,000).If you mean "How many cents are in one million cents?", the answer is obviously one million (or 1,000,000).
Well, one British shilling is equal to 24 U.S. cents. So, you need 4 and 1/6 British shillings to equal one U.S. dollar. British is specified because there is more than one type of shilling throughout the world, such as the Tanzanian shilling.
In the old British system of currency, a shilling was roughly equal to the American quarter, which is 25 cents.
The British Shilling converted to 5 New Pence at decimalisation. The Australian and New Zealand Shillings, amongst many others, converted to 10 cents at decimalisation.
There were twelve predecimal Pennies in a Shilling, as used by many of the British Commonwealth countries. The British Shilling converted to 5 New Pence at the changeover to decimal currency. The Australian and New Zealand Shilling converted to 10 cents at the changeover to decimal currency.
About twenty US cents, or one UK shilling.
a schillling is five pents, so depending on how much the dolar is worth to the pound you shilling is worth anywhere from 5-10 cents
Up until about 1970 the UK had a shilling, worth about 12 cents. The shilling was a 20th of a pound, now replaced by 5 pence. Austria used to have a unit of currency named the schilling, but that has been replaced by the euro.
1 shilling is 24 cents so if you want the answer to five shillings you just do 24 times 5 =120 which is 1 dollar 20 cents
Around 8 cents
The official currency of Kenya is the shilling. Like the American dollar, the Kenyan shilling is divided into 100 cents.
The Shilling as used by Britain and many of the British Empire/Commonwealth countries was abbreviated to "S". It was a subunit of the currency. There were 12 Pence in a Shilling and 20 Shillings in a Pound. These Shillings are part of a long redundant or obsolete currency and are no longer used. The countries currently using the Shilling as their major unit of currency include - Kenya - abbreviation = KSh - (ISO code = KES) - 100 cents = 1 Shilling Somalia - abbreviation = So Sh - (ISO code = SOS) - 100 senti = 1 Shilling Tanzania - abbreviation = ??? - (ISO code = TZS) - 100 senti = 1 Shilling Uganda - abbreviation = USh - (ISO code = UGX) - 100 cents = 1 Shilling
The shilling is the currency of Uganda. Officially divided into cents until 2013, due to substantial inflation the shilling now has no subdivision.