5%
You have to convert each coin to its value in cents. A nickel is 5 cents and a dollar is 100 cents, so a nickel is 5/100 of a dollar, or 5 percent.
One Nickel is 1/20 (or 0.05) of a dollar.
Well, isn't that just a happy little question! One nickel is worth 5 cents, which is 5/100 of a dollar. So, if we write that as a decimal, it would be 0.05. Just a tiny little piece of the dollar, but oh so important in its own way!
1 nickel = 5 cents $1 = 100 cents5/100 * 100% = 5%
9.8 Percent
5%
You have to convert each coin to its value in cents. A nickel is 5 cents and a dollar is 100 cents, so a nickel is 5/100 of a dollar, or 5 percent.
As a dollar is equal to 100 pennies and a nickel is equal to 5 a nickel is 5% of a dollar.
A nickel is 5 percent of a dollar.
A nickel is 5 cents and a dollar is 100 cents, so a nickel is 5/100 or 5% of a dollar.
1/20 of a dollar is a nickel. It's 5 cents.
You have a half dollar and a nickel. One of them, the half dollar, is not a nickel.
1/20 of a dollar is a nickel. It's 5 cents.
1/20 of a dollar is one nickel. It's 5 cents.
one is the US half dollar The "other one" is a nickel 50c the "other one" is a nickel
because a nickel is 0.05 of a dollar
True silver dollars made up till 1935 contained silver and copper but no nickel. Eisenhower and Anthony $1 coins (1971-81 and 1999) were made of a pure copper core with 25% nickel/75% copper cladding, for an overall percentage of 8.33% nickel. Current brass Sacajawea and Presidential dollars contain only 2% nickel (Source: U.S. Mint)