Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some math? Okay, so if you have 30p and you want to know what fraction is 5p of that, it's 5p out of 30p, which simplifies to 1/6. So, like, 5p is one-sixth of 30p. Math, man, it's wild.
6(5p)=30p
30p = 20p + 5p + 5p 40p = 20p + 10p + 10p
you have a 25p and a 5p.
30p / 50p = 30/50 = 3/5
six 6 x 5p = 30p = 15 x 2p
Oh, what a happy little math problem we have here! To find out how many 5ps are equal to the sum of 16p and 14p, we first need to add 16p and 14p together to get 30p. Then, we divide 30p by the value of a single 5p, which is 5p. So, 30p divided by 5p equals 6. That means 6 lovely little 5ps are equal in value to the sum of 16p and 14p.
It is 1/30.
3/10
A half-crown (25p) and a shilling (5p)
A Crown (25p) and a 5p.
in 1970 3p then in 1972 when decimalised 5 new pence!