You do. 6 dimes = 60 cents 9 nickels = 45 cents 6 dimes = 12 nickels
3 dimes is 30 cents and 5 nickels is 25 cents so 3 dimes is worth more.
They weigh the same.
More than 25.
You almost scared me with this one, but I'll give it a go. Easy ones first: (1) 3 quarters (2) 7 dimes; 1 nickel (3) 15 nickels Then it gets tricky: (4) 2 quarters, 5 nickels (5) 2, quarters, 2 dimes, 1 nickel (6) 1 more time to convert 1 dime into 2 nickels (7) 1 quarter, 10 nickels (8) 1 quarter, 5 dimes (9-12) 4 more times to convert each dime, but 1, into 2 nickels (13-18) 6 more times to convert each dime, but 1, into 2 nickels. Did I miss any? 18 different ways (thank goodness you didn't include pennies!)
5 nickels is a quarter. 15 nickels is 75 cents. Four more nickels makes it to 95 cents, for a total of 19 nickels. That makes sense, because 20 nickels would be a dollar, and you are only one nickel short of that.
A quarter weighs more than a nickel, which in turn weighs more than a penny. A quarter weighs 5.67 grams, a nickel weighs 5 grams, and a penny weighs 2.5 grams.
You do. 6 dimes = 60 cents 9 nickels = 45 cents 6 dimes = 12 nickels
3 dimes is 30 cents and 5 nickels is 25 cents so 3 dimes is worth more.
Using the weight of modern steel quarters (2000 to present), at 4.4 grams each, six of the coins weigh 26.4 grams.
Well, honey, if we're talking nickels, then you're looking at 15 of those shiny little coins to make 75 cents. It's simple math, no need to make it more complicated than it needs to be. Just grab those nickels and count 'em out!
65 pennies 0 dimes and 13 nickels 1 dime and 10 nickels 2 dimes and 9 nickels 3 dimes and 7 nickels 4 dimes and 5 nickels 5 dimes and 3 nickels 6 dimes and 1 nickel 2 quarters and 1 dime and 1 nickel That's all I can think of, but there are much more!
They weigh the same.
To make 60c, you can have no more than 2 quarters, because if you had 3 quarters that would make 75c, which is too much. So, you could make 60c with no quarters and some nickels, 1 quarter and some nickels, or 2 quarters and some nickels. If you have no quarters, you would need 12 nickels (12 x 5 = 60) if you had 1 quarter, you would need 7 nickels (7 x 5 = 35, 35 + 25 = 60) If you had 2 quarters, you would need 2 nickels (2 x 5 = 10, 25 x 2 = 50, 10 + 50 = 60) So, if you have to make 60c using quarters AND nickels, there are two different ways to do it: 1 quarter + 7 nickels 2 quarters + 2 nickels
Assuming that you are referring only to currently circulating denominations (1 cent, 5 cents, 10 cents, 25 cents and 50 cents), there are two possible combinations: 45 pennies, 2 nickels, 2 dimes, 1 and quarter and 40 pennies, 8 nickels and 2 dimes If you are including obsolete US denominations (1/2 cent, 2 cents, 3 cents, and 20 cents), there are many more possible combinations, including, among others, fifty 2 cent pieces.
cuz it has more "CENTS"
More than 25.