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Four fives
you multiply 5 by 2 which is ten or you think of adding 5 two's or adding 2 fives.
5(5 + 5/5) or (5/5+5)*5 and 5*5 + sqrt[5*5] and 5*5 + (5 squared)/5
4545 * 2 = 90You can do this in your mind by adding 40 + 40 = 80, then add the two fives 5 + 5 = 10, and add those two sums together. 80 + 10 = 90.
In order to find the answer to a muliplication problem you first line up the the one's column of the two digits, placing the greater number on top of the one with a lower value. Let's call the lower valued number X and the higher number valued number Y. Okay, first multiply X's one's column digit by Y's. Place the answer beneath. Then multiply X's one's column digit by Y's hundred's column (If necessary) That should give you the answer if your solving with two one-digit numbers. However if you're solving the problem with two-digit numbers the procedure is different. You must place a zero below the original answer in order to continue to multiply the remaining factors. Then if X still has another digit to multiply by Y you add another zero beneath that product. And then add all of the products from the problem. Though, if you need to know how to solve a one-digit problem you go like this: Say I needed to multiply 5*5=. Well you know you need to add 5 fives together to get the answer so, 5+5=10+5=15+5=20+5=25. That's using 5 fives! So the answer to 5*5=25. If you follow that method other problems should be very easy.
8 5 dollar bills
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He would have five ten-dollar bills and eight five-dollar bills.
Kate has 28 five-dollar-bills and 32 twenty-dollar-bills.
Four fives
8 fives and 10 ones for the scrubs apex
Four fives
Two fives and four ones
Dollars and cents. The cents are: pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, and half dollars. Dollar bills come in ones, twos (rarely, though), fives, tens, twenties, fifties, and hundreds.
Green and white $5 bills with the large portrait of Lincoln inside an oval have a somewhat fuzzy watermark that's similar to the portrait. Newer gray and purple fives have the number "5".
it all depends how do you want type of bills you use like ones, fives, tens and so on
In one dollar bills it is 1 tonne (2000 lbs - 900kg). According to US treasury. Video on youtube...minute physics It would depend on the type of currency. For example a million dollars in paper money, and are they one dollar bills, fives, tens, 100s etc., is it in gold, silver, is it in coins and what kind etc., or maybe it's just a cashiers check. Thus, all I can say is, it depends.