3 quarters, 1 dime, and 3 pennies. 25+25+25+10+1+1+1=88
Yes, you can make 60 cents with 7 coins using a combination of different denominations. For example, you can use 1 half dollar (50 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 5 pennies (5 cents) to total 60 cents. This adds up to 7 coins: 1 + 1 + 5 = 7 coins.
88 cents.
You can make 20 cents with 7 coins by using 1 half dollar (50 cents), 1 quarter (25 cents), 1 dime (10 cents), and 4 pennies (4 cents). However, to specifically achieve 20 cents, you can use 1 nickel (5 cents) and 5 pennies (5 cents), totaling 20 cents with 6 coins. Alternatively, you can use 2 dimes (20 cents) and no pennies, totaling 20 cents with 2 coins.
You will make 49 cents with these 7 coins, 1 quarter, 2 dimes, 4 pennies.
A Quarter, a Nickel and 7 Dimes: 1 × 25 cents + 1 × 5 cents + 7 × 10 cents = 100 cents = 1 dollar.
3 dimes 1 nickel and 3 pennies
To make 88 cents using 7 coins, you can use the following combination: 3 quarters (25 cents each), 1 dime (10 cents), and 3 pennies (1 cent each). This adds up to 75 cents from the quarters, 10 cents from the dime, and 3 cents from the pennies, totaling 88 cents.
it's possible only if there are 20 cent coins only for that 7 dollars 1 dollar = 100 cents, 100 cents = 5 of 20 cent coins since you need 5 of 20 cent coins for a dollar, you do 7 times of it. 7 X 5 = 35. Therefore, you need 35 of 20 cent coins for 7 dollars. (or there are 35 of 20 cent coins in 7 dollars)
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88 cents.
Two dimes and five pennies make 25 cents -- seven coins in all.
Indeed. 74 cents can be made with the following set of 7 coins: 50c 10c 10c 1c 1c 1c 1c
You will make 49 cents with these 7 coins, 1 quarter, 2 dimes, 4 pennies.
Four 5 cent coins and three 10 cent coins.
A Quarter, a Nickel and 7 Dimes: 1 × 25 cents + 1 × 5 cents + 7 × 10 cents = 100 cents = 1 dollar.
two 5 cents,four 1 cents and one 25 cent
5 x 5 cents + 2 x 1 cent = 27 cents