Let ( q ) be the number of quarters and ( d ) be the number of dimes. We have two equations based on the problem:
Solving these equations, we find that there are 6 quarters and 96 dimes.
60 cents, 39 dimes, 0 quarters, 1 half = $5. 65 cents, 31 dimes, 3 quarters, 1 half = $5. 70 cents, 23 dimes, 6 quarters, 1 half = $5. 75 cents, 15 dimes, 9 quarters, 1 half = $5. 80 cents, 7 dimes, 12 quarters, 1 half = $5 there are other combination as well with nickels etc
To make a dollar with 13 coins, you can use a combination of pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters. One possible solution is 1 half dollar (50 cents), 2 dimes (20 cents), and 10 pennies (10 cents), totaling 80 cents with 13 coins. However, a more straightforward combination is 3 quarters (75 cents), 2 dimes (20 cents), and 8 pennies (8 cents), which also totals 100 cents with exactly 13 coins.
To make 91 cents using 12 coins, you can use a combination of quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies. One possible combination is 3 quarters (75 cents), 1 dime (10 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 7 pennies (7 cents). This totals 91 cents with exactly 12 coins.
10 pennies,2 quarters, 3 dimes
2 quarters,4 dimes, and 3 pennies
60 cents, 39 dimes, 0 quarters, 1 half = $5. 65 cents, 31 dimes, 3 quarters, 1 half = $5. 70 cents, 23 dimes, 6 quarters, 1 half = $5. 75 cents, 15 dimes, 9 quarters, 1 half = $5. 80 cents, 7 dimes, 12 quarters, 1 half = $5 there are other combination as well with nickels etc
To make a dollar with 13 coins, you can use a combination of pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters. One possible solution is 1 half dollar (50 cents), 2 dimes (20 cents), and 10 pennies (10 cents), totaling 80 cents with 13 coins. However, a more straightforward combination is 3 quarters (75 cents), 2 dimes (20 cents), and 8 pennies (8 cents), which also totals 100 cents with exactly 13 coins.
To make 91 cents using 12 coins, you can use a combination of quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies. One possible combination is 3 quarters (75 cents), 1 dime (10 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 7 pennies (7 cents). This totals 91 cents with exactly 12 coins.
10 pennies,2 quarters, 3 dimes
2 quarters,4 dimes, and 3 pennies
Three Quarters, Two Dimes, and Three Pennies makes 98 Cents25+25+25+10+10+1+1+1=98
3 quarters 2 dimes 5 peenies
1200 dimes multiplied by 10 cents per dime gives the monetary value of the coins in cents--12,000 cents. Dividing this by 25 cents, the value of a single quarter, gives the number of quarters, or 480.
To make 68 cents with 13 coins, you can use a combination of pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters. For example, you could use 3 quarters (75 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 10 pennies (10 cents) to total 68 cents, but that would exceed 13 coins. The correct combination is 2 quarters (50 cents), 1 dime (10 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 10 pennies (10 cents), which adds up to 68 cents using exactly 13 coins.
The denominations for 1959 were: Half dollars, Quarters, Dimes, Nickels and Cents.
Three quarters, two dimes, one penny.
9 Quarters are equal to eighteen dimes and nine nickels. Eighteen dimes equal to $1.80. Nine nickels equal to 25 cents. So $1.80 + 25 cents = $2.25 You need exactly 9 quarters.