This is a system of equations.
Let d= number of dimes.
q= number of quarters.
d+q=1000 -> 10d + 10q = 10000
.10d+.25q=199.90-> -10d+(-25q)=-19990
Multiply each equation to get one of the variables to drop out.
Add the equations.
(-15q)=(-9990)
q=666
1000-666=334
There are 666 quarters and 334 dimes.
1000 quarters is $250
If you had 1000 US quarter coins, it would mean you have the equivalent of $250 US dollars. This can be solved by taking 1000 and multiplying it by .25 A more interesting question is how much would all those coins weigh? To fill a roll of quarters takes 40 quarters, and a roll of quarters equals $10. Each roll of quarters weighs roughly half a pound. Therefore 1000 quarters would weigh 50 pounds, that is a lot of weight to carry around in coinage when it could all be replaced by two $100 bills and a $50 bill and fit easily in your pocket.
10000 pennies, or 1000 dimes.
1000
The answer is one $1,000 bill. There are 10 dimes in $1.00. 10 dimes divided into 10,000 dimes = $1,000.00.
$910.00
This is a very vague question. Are you asking "how many coins equal $1,000.00 in cash?" Depending on the denomination of coins it can be 1,000 One dollar coins = $1,000.00 or 100,000 One cent coins = $1,000.00 or any combination of cents, nickels, dimes, quarters, half dollars or dollar coins.
5000 pennies or 500 dimes or 200 quarters or 50 dollars
There's no single answer; it depends on how many of each coin you have. For example you could have any of the following:400 quarters1000 dimes2000 nickels500 dimes and 1000 nickels200 quarters, 400 dimes, and 200 nickelsand so on....
Work in cents...10D + 25Q = 1405 and D = 100 - QSubstitute: 10(100 - Q) + 25Q = 1405ie 1000 - 10Q + 25Q = 1405ie 15Q = 405so Q = 27, making D = 73
1000 dimes is 100 dollars.
1000 quarters is $250
If you had 1000 US quarter coins, it would mean you have the equivalent of $250 US dollars. This can be solved by taking 1000 and multiplying it by .25 A more interesting question is how much would all those coins weigh? To fill a roll of quarters takes 40 quarters, and a roll of quarters equals $10. Each roll of quarters weighs roughly half a pound. Therefore 1000 quarters would weigh 50 pounds, that is a lot of weight to carry around in coinage when it could all be replaced by two $100 bills and a $50 bill and fit easily in your pocket.
There are approximately 723.4 troy ounces of silver in $1000 face value of pre-1965 US silver coins (dimes, quarters, and half dollars - the answer for silver dollars would actually be a bit higher). This number assumes that the coins are in uncirculated condition, or very close to it, which the phrase "bad junk silver" implies is not the case. If the coins are badly worn (that is, a little of the metal from each coin is worn away), you could have as little as 700 troy ounces.
4 quarters to every dollar... 4 x 1000 = 4000 quarters
Work in cents. 10D + 25Q = 1975 and D + Q = 100 so D = 100 - Q 1000 - 10Q + 25Q = 1975 15Q = 975 Q = 65 making D = 35; Check: does 10 x 35 + 65 x 25 = 1975? 350 + 1625 = 1975. Game over.
20% of a gallon