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!
Three quarters is one quarter less than "1" AND three quarters adds up to 75 cents which is 25 cents less than one dollar. So three quarters is both smaller than "1" and smaller than a dollar!
-16
Any number adds to 15.
The numbers rounded to 5 decimal places are: 1.58872 and -12.58872 A more accurate answer can be found by using the quadratic equation formula
13 dimes plus 1 nickel adds up to $1.35
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.
Unless you find someone who wants it, the symbol adds nothing the value of 5 cents
Assuming American coinage, the two coins would be a 25 cent coin and a 5 cent coin. Assuming non-American coins, one is not a 10 cent coin, but the other one is. The other coin being a 20 cent coin.
To make 61 cents using 7 coins, you can use 2 quarters (50 cents), 1 dime (10 cents), 2 nickels (10 cents), and 2 pennies (1 cent). This combination adds up to a total of 61 cents.
It's copper-nickel, not silver. If you found it in change it's only worth 50 cents. Uncirculated or proof versions are worth $2.50 - $3.00
The gold plating adds no collectible value to a coin that's only 25 cents to start with.
There are 100 cents in a dollar, so 2,000 cents makes 20 dollars.
5 cents. Gold plating adds a very thin layer of gold on the coin, it hardly increases the coin's value. The 2005 buffalo nickels were intended for circulation and only worth 5 cents unless uncirculated or proof, but since your coin has been damaged due to gold plating, even if it was uncirculated or proof it is now just worth 5 cents.
Use iterative adds. 5x2= 5+5 10x4= 10+10+10+10
What a load of s**t is your most common answer
Is the imprint normal or mirror-imaged? If it's the normal direction, you might have a nickel that somehow fell into a cent press and was struck twice. However since cents are smaller than nickels, the coin should show some other damage from the press. Regardless, in that case you'll need to have it examined in person by someone who specializes in error coins. If it's a double strike it could have some definite extra value. If the images are reversed, what probably happened is that someone with too much time on their hands put a cent on either side of the nickel and hit it with a hammer, driving a mirror image of the cents into the nickel's surface. If that describes what you have it's considered damaged and is worth exactly 5 cents.