$1 = 100 cents → 45 cents/$1 = 45 cents/100 cents = 45/100 = 9/20
90 cents / 1 dollar = 90 cents/100 conets = 90/100 = 9/10
90 cents = 9/10 of a dollar
9 dimes are worth 90 cents or pennies. There are 100 pennies in a dollar and therefore 9 dimes is 90/100ths of a dollar. This simplifies to 9/10ths.
254,684,876,545,415,751,414,541,252,549 9 times itself 100 times is 265613988875874769338781322035779626829233452653394495974574961739092490901302182994384699044001
9 /100$1.00 = 100 cents9 cents/100 cents of a dollar
$1 = 100 cents → 45 cents/$1 = 45 cents/100 cents = 45/100 = 9/20
There are 100 cents in one dollar. Therefore, nine twentieths of a dollar is equal to 9/20 x 100 = 45 cents.
90 cents / 1 dollar = 90 cents/100 conets = 90/100 = 9/10
8-9 cents 100 cents.
A Quarter, a Nickel and 7 Dimes: 1 × 25 cents + 1 × 5 cents + 7 × 10 cents = 100 cents = 1 dollar.
90 cents = 9/10 of a dollar
9 dimes are worth 90 cents or pennies. There are 100 pennies in a dollar and therefore 9 dimes is 90/100ths of a dollar. This simplifies to 9/10ths.
It is 90/100. You can simplify that fraction if required.
It is 4 dollars and 50 cents ($4.50) or 4.5 dollars. 9 x 50 = 450 and 450 divided by 100 cents/dollar = 4.5
Korea does not use the dollar. The unit of currency is the Won. 100 Won is a little more than 9 cents in US dollars. There is no 100 Won banknote. They are printed in 1,000 5,000 10,000 and 50,000 Won notes.
8 - 9 cents with inflation to buying power scale. Interestingly it costs to print in 2012: $1 and $2 notes -- 5.2 cents per note $5 and $10 notes -- 8.5 cents per note $20 and $50 notes -- 9.2 cents per note $100 note -- 7.7 cents per note Cost of Producing the Penny, Nickel, Dime, Quarter, and Golden Dollar Coins. $1 CoinQuarterDimeNickelPenny18.03 cents11.14 cents5.65 cents11.18 cents2.41 cents (United States Mint, 2011) One dollar. The value of a dollar is always one dollar. What that dollar might buy is another matter.