14 Quarters = $3.50
28 nickels = $1.40
To get this answer you simple add 2 nickles to one quarter which = 35 cents
divide 4.90 by 35 which equals 14
14 will be the number of quarters and double that, 28 will be the number of nickels
Two quarters, two nickels, three pennies
A nickel is 5 cents so 25 nickels is 25*5 = 125 cents. A quarter is 25 cents so 125 cents = 125/25 = 5 coins.
All coins such as quarters, nickels, dimes, and half dollars
The answer is four nickels, two quarters, and five pennies equals seventy cents. I had help!
2 quarters,1 dime,2 nickels,7 pennies.
The denominations for 1959 were: Half dollars, Quarters, Dimes, Nickels and Cents.
3 quarters & 2 nickels
10,000 Pennies 2,000 Nickels 1,000 Dimes 400 Quarters 100 Dollar Coins
Dollars or cents? Dollars?= 5500 pennies or 550 dimes or 1100 nickels or 220 quarters or 110 half dollars. Cents?= 1 half dollar and 1 nickel or 2 quarters and 1 nickel or five dimes and 1 nickel or 11 nickels or 55 pennies
Yes! If you use Half Dollars, Quarters, Dimes, Nickels, and Pennies!
Only dollars, half dollars an quarters dated 1776-1976 are "Bicentennial" coins. Dimes, nickels and cents are face value.
20 quarters
Two quarters, two nickels, three pennies
Two quarters Three nickels Three pennies
All denominations - Lincoln cents, Jefferson nickels, Roosevelt dimes, 5 different state quarters, Kennedy halves, and Sacagawea dollars.
In 1913, the U.S. minted cents, nickels, dimes, quarters, and half dollars, as well as the gold quarter, half, and double eagle.
Cents, nickels, dimes, quarters, and half dollars were struck at both Philadelphia (no mint mark back then) and Denver (D mint mark)