The answer will depend on 4 WHAT! And since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
4 Quarters, and one 50-cent coin.
20 / 5 = 4 328 / 4 = 82
Which currency are you using? Twenty-cent coins don't exist in the United States anymore.
Well, honey, you've got yourself a math problem. To make 85 cents using those coins, you can have combinations like 1 fifty cent coin, 1 twenty-five cent coin, 1 five cent coin, and 1 five cent coin. That's just one way to do it, but there are multiple combinations you can come up with to make a total of 85 cents using those coins.
22 stamps
To determine how many 20 cent coins can fit in a milk carton, we first need to know the volume of the milk carton in cubic centimeters. Once we have that measurement, we can calculate the volume of a single 20 cent coin. By dividing the volume of the milk carton by the volume of a single 20 cent coin, we can determine the maximum number of 20 cent coins that can fit in the milk carton.
There are 5C3 = (5*4*3)/(2*1) = 30 combinations.
Well, isn't that a happy little math problem we have here! If Ann has more 50c coins than 10c coins and the total value is $5, we can figure out that she must have 4 10c coins. Let's give Ann a little encouragement as she counts her coins and solves this puzzle.
There are many. Various ways to make a dollar using coins. 100 pennies, 4 quarters, 2 50 cent coins, 1 50 cent coin and 2 quarters, 10 dimes, 20 nickels, and many variations. There are 293 ways to make a dollar but maybe there are more possible ways.
nickel, two-cent coin, 2 pennies
4 50 cent pieces 4 nickels 1 penny
A nickel, a 3 cent piece, a 2 cent piece, a one cent piece.