Too simple: 1 quarter 2 dimes 2 nickels 4 pennies
There are, for example, 2012 piastre coins from Egypt or Jordan
A nickel is 5 cents so 60 nickels is 5 * 60 = 300 cents, or $3.
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Solving a one variable linear equation involves getting the variable on one side of the equals sign by itself. To do this one uses the properties of numbers.
25 cents. Panama uses US currency but mints its own coins.
Irish 10p coins are no longer legal tender. Instead, Ireland uses the Euro. These 10p coins have very modest values to collectors. Your coin might be worth up to about 15 cents US if circulated or up to 50 cents if uncirculated.
If you are referring to modern circulation coins, Italy adopted the euro in 2002 and uses all 8 current denominations. All have the common euro designs on the obverse sides, while the reverses are as follows:1 euro cent: Castel del Monte, a 13th-century castle2 cents: Mole Antonelliana, a tower symbolic of the city of Torino5 cents: The Colosseum in Rome10 cents: An interpretation of Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus"20 cents: A modern sculpture by Umberto Boccioni50 cents: The statue of Emperor Marcus Aurelius€1: Da Vinci's drawing "Vitruvian Man'€2: Raphael's portrait of Dante Alighieri
Too simple: 1 quarter 2 dimes 2 nickels 4 pennies
Germany uses the euro. Coins are 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, and 50 cents, and 1 and 2 euros. In common speech the lower-denomination coins are often called pfennige (pennies) because the pfennig was the smallest denomination prior to adoption of the euro. It's the same as the American and Canadian practice of calling cents "pennies" even though neither country has used penny-denominated coins in dozens of decades.
Venezuela uses the bolivar and the USA uses the dollar.
Ten cents - it's not silver, it's nickel. Canada uses single-layer coins instead of the 3-layer "sandwich" metal used in the U.S.
The United States uses the dollar, which is made up of 100 cents. Current circulating coins are minted in the following denominations: 1 cent (penny) 5 cents (nickel) 10 cents (dime) 25 cents (quarter) 50 cents (half dollar) 1 dollar In the past, there were coins for 1/2, 2, 3, and 20 cents, as well as gold coins for 2.5, 5, 10, and 20 dollars. For paper money/banknotes, there are bills for 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 dollars. There used to be even larger notes at 500, 1,000, 5,000, 10,000, and 100,000 dollars, but none have been printed since the 1940s and they were withdrawn twenty years later. The $100,000 bill was only used between government offices and never saw circulation in public.
one country that uses dollars and cents is Australia
jewelry and coins
All US coins use metal
Dollars and Cents