3:7
A nickel is worth 5 cents, and one dollar is worth 100 cents. The ratio of a nickel to one dollar is 5:100. When reduced to simplest form, this ratio becomes 1:20.
In a dollar, there are 20 nickels and 4 quarters. The ratio of nickels to quarters is therefore 20:4, which simplifies to 5:1. This means for every 5 nickels, there is 1 quarter.
To find the ratio between 15 quarters and 30 dimes, we first convert both values to the same unit, such as cents. A quarter is worth 25 cents, so 15 quarters equal 375 cents. A dime is worth 10 cents, so 30 dimes equal 300 cents. The ratio of 375 cents to 300 cents simplifies to 5:4.
No. If it is a ratio (as it is) then it has no units: it is a pure number.
3 dimes = 30 cents 8 quarters = 200 cents. So, the ratio is 30/200 or 3/20
The rates change every day. Use this currency converter to calculate it.
Well, honey, the current ratio of household debt to disposable income in the United States is around 92%. In simpler terms, for every dollar of disposable income, the average American owes 92 cents. So, watch those credit cards and spend wisely, darling.
A nickel is worth 5 cents, and one dollar is worth 100 cents. The ratio of a nickel to one dollar is 5:100. When reduced to simplest form, this ratio becomes 1:20.
A healthy debt to asset ratio is typically around 0.5 or lower. This means that for every dollar of assets, there is 50 cents or less of debt.
Income is a ratio measure. In ratio measures, one can order categories, specify the difference between two categories, and the value of zero on the variable represents the absence of the variable. Thus, income can take on values of $0, $10, $30,000, etc. Zero dollar income means the absence of income, making income a ratio measurement.
a woman earns 76 cents to a man's dollar
Well, honey, if we're talking ratios, 3 dollars to 65 cents is the same as 300 cents to 65 cents. Simplify that down and you get a ratio of 60:13. So, there you have it, 3 dollars to 65 cents in a ratio is 60:13.
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.
In a dollar, there are 20 nickels and 4 quarters. The ratio of nickels to quarters is therefore 20:4, which simplifies to 5:1. This means for every 5 nickels, there is 1 quarter.
for every 1 us dollar it is 1144.29 Korean dollars.
The exchange rate fluctuates on a daily, even hourly basis.As of early 2012, the exchange was about 1 US cent to 0.63 New Pence, which means that "putting in your two cents worth" would cost you about 1.3 pence.For the Euro, 2 US cents was about 1.5 Eurocents (0.015 Euro).(US cents convert to "new pence" at the same ratio as Dollar to Pound Sterling. There are 100 cents, or pennies, per US dollar; 100 new pence to the pound.)* You can find the current ratio at the related link below.
Expressed as a ratio in its lowest terms, 120:390 is equal to 4:13.