You just have to take this one step at a time. Start out with the first part:
One-third of them were pennies. So of the 24 coins, a third of them were pennies. Multiply 1/3 by 24 and you get eight.
One-fourth of them were nickels. 1/4 times 24 is Six.
One-sixth of them were dimes. 1/6 times 24 is Four.
And the rest were Quarters. Add up the total number of coins you have already (8+6+4=18) and then subtract that from 24. You answer is 24-18=6
So, you have:
Eight Pennies
Six Nickels
Four Dimes
Six Quarters
how many quarters are in 40 nickels
47 Quarters 83 Nickels
$1.65 is 3 quarters + 18 nickels.
many ways 4 quarters and 3 nickels 4 quarters and a dime and a nickel 3 quarters 8 nickels 3 quarters and 4 dimes etc etc etc
hundreds of ways... 50 dimes 100 nickels 20 quarters 40 dimes and 2 nickels 90 nickels and 5 dimes 16 quarters and 10 dimes 30 dimes 2 nickels 4 quarters etc figure it out ;)
25 quarters, 20 nickels.
There are 11 ways to get $4.10 using only quarters and nickels. These combinations are: 41 quarters 8 quarters, 6 nickels 15 quarters, 2 nickels 3 quarters, 12 nickels 20 quarters, 1 nickel 35 quarters 8 quarters, 5 nickels 15 quarters, 1 nickel 5 quarters, 10 nickels 30 quarters, 1 nickel 1 quarter, 20 nickels
Peggy had three times as many quarters as nickels. She had $1.60 in all. How many nickels and how many quarters did she have?
7 quarters and 11 nickles
how many quarters are in 40 nickels
7 quarters = 1.7511 nickels = 0.551.75 + 0.55 = 2.30
8 quarters and 16 nickels
$3.10 could be no quarters and 62 nickels, or it could be 12 quarters and 2 nickels, or it could be eleven other different mixes. There are 13 different ways to do it with quarters and nickels.
5 quarters * 5 nickels/quarter = 5 * 5 nickels = 25 nickels
19 quarters and 4 nickels.
47 Quarters 83 Nickels
$1.65 is 3 quarters + 18 nickels.