One possible combination to make 66 cents with five coins is using two dimes (20 cents), one quarter (25 cents), and two pennies (2 cents). Alternatively, you could use one quarter (25 cents), four dimes (40 cents), and one penny (1 cent). Multiple combinations can achieve the same total, but these are a couple of examples.
sixty-six cents
35 cents/12 = 2.927 cents each bought at selling at ( 10/3) 3.333 cents 3.333 cents - 2.927 cents = 0.406 cents profit per pencil 0.406 cents * 66 pencils = 26.796 cents ( call it 27 cents profit on a sale of 66 pencils )
if you have 66 dollars or cents put it down if you don't take 66 steps
three twenty five cents, and three one cents
I think there are 88 different combinations of coins that can make up 66 cents.
93
93 cents 93 cents
The Greatest Common Divisor of 66, 93 is 3.
Work for it!
sixty-six cents
35 cents/12 = 2.927 cents each bought at selling at ( 10/3) 3.333 cents 3.333 cents - 2.927 cents = 0.406 cents profit per pencil 0.406 cents * 66 pencils = 26.796 cents ( call it 27 cents profit on a sale of 66 pencils )
if you have 66 dollars or cents put it down if you don't take 66 steps
three twenty five cents, and three one cents
93
55 cents
A dollar and 93 cents.