5 cents = 1 nickel 10 cents = 1 dime 25 cents = 1 quarter 100 cents = 1 dollar thus, 20 nickels in 1 dollar 10 dimes in 1 dollar 4 quarters in 1 dollar
In America a dime is the nickname for 10 cents i.e. a tenth of a dollar 100 cents = 1 dollar nickel = 5 cents quarter = 25 cents
A Quarter, a Nickel and 7 Dimes: 1 × 25 cents + 1 × 5 cents + 7 × 10 cents = 100 cents = 1 dollar.
5 cents
125 cents = 125 pennies = 25 nickles = 12 dimes + 1 nickel = 5 quarters one dollar and 25 cents
5.
A dollar is 100 cents, a quarter is 25 cents, and a nickel is 5 cents. Thus a dollar is composed of 4 (100/25) quarters, or 20 (100/5) nickels. Therefore there are 5 times as many nickels in a dollar as there are quarters. Another way to look at it is to say that there are 5 nickels in a quarter, so there are 5 times as many nickels as quarters in any amount.
5 cents = 1 nickel 10 cents = 1 dime 25 cents = 1 quarter 100 cents = 1 dollar thus, 20 nickels in 1 dollar 10 dimes in 1 dollar 4 quarters in 1 dollar
In America a dime is the nickname for 10 cents i.e. a tenth of a dollar 100 cents = 1 dollar nickel = 5 cents quarter = 25 cents
A Quarter, a Nickel and 7 Dimes: 1 × 25 cents + 1 × 5 cents + 7 × 10 cents = 100 cents = 1 dollar.
5 cents
125 cents = 125 pennies = 25 nickles = 12 dimes + 1 nickel = 5 quarters one dollar and 25 cents
1/5 Nickel= 5 cents Quarter = 25 cents 5+5+5+5+5= 25
4/5 of a dollar is 80 cents. 4/5 cents of a dollar is 4/5 cents.
20
Well, isn't that a happy little puzzle! You can use a combination of a half dollar (50 cents), a quarter (25 cents), a nickel (5 cents), and three pennies (3 cents) to make a total of 80 cents. Just remember, there are many different ways to solve a problem, so feel free to get creative and explore different combinations!
All the United States coins are... The penny = 1 cent The nickel = 5 cents The dime = 10 cents The quarter = 25 cents The half-dollar = 50 cents The gold dollar = $1