To make 26 cents using 9 coins, you can use 3 different denominations: 1 quarter (25 cents), 1 penny (1 cent), and 7 nickels (5 cents each). The combination would be 1 quarter, 1 penny, and 7 nickels, totaling 26 cents with exactly 9 coins.
In 2011, it can't be done with current US coinage.
9 pennies, 4 nickels, 3 dimes
Yes. 2 quarters, 5 nickels and two pennies = .50+.25+ .02 + 77 cents
To make 44 cents in coins, you can use a combination of pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters. One possible combination is one quarter (25 cents), one dime (10 cents), and nine pennies (9 cents). Alternatively, you could use four dimes (40 cents) and four pennies (4 cents). There are several combinations possible, as long as the total adds up to 44 cents.
Yes, you can make 25 cents with 9 coins by using 5 pennies and 4 nickels.
Three dimes, three nickles, and three pennies.
Use one dime, two nickels and 6 cents.
Yes, you can make seventy-four cents with nine coins: quarter, quarter, dime, nickel, nickel, penny, penny, penny, penny
You cannot. With US coins, you are limited to pennies, nickels, and dimes. 5 pennies = 5 cents 4 nickels = 20 cents Total of 9 coins and 25 cents. It is impossible to use any greater number of coins and impossible to use 10 coins in today's US currency.
In 2011, it can't be done with current US coinage.
1 dime, 2 nickels, 6 pennies
9 pennies, 4 nickels, 3 dimes
To make 89 cents with 6 coins, you have to first realize that the "9" part of the cents is comprised of 5 cents and 4 pennies. Therefore, you have to have 4 pennies and 85 cents using 2 coins; impossible, since you would need 3 coins(if you had half-dollars) to make that amount: a half-dollar, quarter, and a dime. Basically, it's impossible with only coins worth 0.01, 0.05, 0.10, 0.25, and 0.50 of the currency(US$, I assume?)
Yes. 2 quarters, 5 nickels and two pennies = .50+.25+ .02 + 77 cents
1 quarter, 5 dimes, and 3 pennies
3x pennies +3x nickles +3x quarters ------------------ $ 0.93