4 dimes
40 pennies
1 quarter 15 pennies
1 quarter 1 dime 5 pennies
3 dimes 10 pennies
2 dimes 20 pennies
1 dime 30 pennies
You can make 25 cents with seven coins by using two quarters and five pennies. This combination totals 25 cents (50 cents from the quarters and 5 cents from the pennies). Another way is to use one quarter, one nickel, and five dimes, which also adds up to 25 cents.
To make 58 cents using 6 coins, you can use 1 half dollar (50 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 3 pennies (3 cents). This combination totals 58 cents: 50 + 5 + 3 = 58. Another possible combination is to use 2 dimes (20 cents), 1 quarter (25 cents), and 3 pennies (3 cents), which also adds up to 58 cents.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with a brain teaser, huh? Well, let's see... you could have a penny, a nickel, and a quarter, that's 31 cents. Then throw in a dime and four more pennies for the remaining 51 cents. Boom, 8 coins, 82 cents. Math and coins, like peanut butter and jelly, am I right?
Well, honey, to make $1.56 using coins, you could use 1 dollar coin, 1 half-dollar coin, 1 nickel, and 1 penny. That adds up to $1.50 + $0.05 + $0.01 = $1.56. Just don't go spending it all in one place now!
To make 62 cents, you can combine different coins. For example, you could use two quarters (50 cents), one dime (10 cents), and two pennies (2 cents) to total 62 cents. Alternatively, you could use six dimes (60 cents) and two pennies or any other combination of coins that adds up to that amount.
Well, isn't that a happy little challenge! You could make 65 cents using a combination of a quarter (25 cents), a dime (10 cents), and three nickels (15 cents). Just like painting, sometimes it's about mixing different elements together to create something beautiful.
To make 55 cents using 12 coins, you could use 3 quarters (25 cents each), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 8 pennies (1 cent each). This combination adds up to 75 cents from the quarters, 5 cents from the nickel, and 8 cents from the pennies, totaling 55 cents.
To make 75 cents using three different coins, you can use a quarter (25 cents), a nickel (5 cents), and a half-dollar (50 cents). This combination adds up to a total of 75 cents.
You would have to use a half dollar coin (which is not common) along with 1 dime, 1 nickel, and 1 penny
To make 58 cents using 6 coins, you can use 1 half dollar (50 cents), 1 nickel (5 cents), and 3 pennies (3 cents). This combination totals 58 cents: 50 + 5 + 3 = 58. Another possible combination is to use 2 dimes (20 cents), 1 quarter (25 cents), and 3 pennies (3 cents), which also adds up to 58 cents.
one fifty-cent piece one quarter one dime one nickel
Oh, dude, totally! You can make 45 cents using 5 coins if you have a quarter (25 cents), a dime (10 cents), and three nickels (5 cents each). That's like basic math, man. So yeah, you can totally make 45 cents with those coins.
To make 53 cents with five coins, you can use two quarters (25 cents each), one nickel (5 cents), and two pennies (1 cent each). This combination adds up to 50 cents from the quarters and nickel, plus 3 cents from the two pennies, totaling 53 cents.
Three coins that equal 80 cents could be a quarter (25 cents), a quarter (25 cents), and a half-dollar (50 cents). This combination adds up to a total of 80 cents.
It most likely is gold plated, gold plating adds really no value to the coin and like any other 1999 nickel, it is worth 5 cents.
65/5= 13 nickels
Unless you find someone who wants it, the symbol adds nothing the value of 5 cents