75 cents can be made from 5 ten-cent coins, 3 five-cent coins, and 10 one-cent coins.
The U.S.A. 5 cent coin is 5 gram Other countries also use a 5 Cent coin though, and it was not mentioned in the question which country. Example: the Australia 5 cent coin is 2.83 gram
2 5 cent, you idiot.
A nickel is contemporary US slang for the 5 cent piece. However, it didn't always used to be that, before the 5 cent nickel coin was introduced, flying eagle and Indian head cents were made with nickel and were known as "nickels", along with the three-cent nickel.
40 cent is 1/5 of $2.00
It is made of bronze or copper-clad steel.
75 cents can be made from 5 ten-cent coins, 3 five-cent coins, and 10 one-cent coins.
No; 5 Centavo coins from Mexico were made of brass in 1960.
1856 Large Cent mintages: No exact numbers for the slanted '5', however the combined total of the 1856 cent (straight 5 and slanted 5) is 2,690,463 Source: http://coinauctionshelp.com/BraidedHair_LargeCent_Mintages_PriceGuide.html
2-cent coins were made of the same bronze alloy as 1-cent coins: 95% copper and 5% tin/zinc. Their weight was exactly twice that of a bronze cent, as well - 6.22 gm.
No US 5 cent coins were made in 1922
North Carolina in 1891.
Gold Coins: $20-$10-$5-$3-$2.50-$1.00 Silver coins: Dollar-Half Dollar-Quarter- 20 cent piece-Dime-Half Dime-3 cent silver. Copper Coins: 5 cent- 3 cent (nickel)- 2 cent- 1 cent- Half cent
So many were made that year if it's from pocket change spend it.
In 1960, Canadian 1 cent pieces ("pennies") were made of bronze, 5 cent pieces ("nickels") were made of nickel, and 10 cent pieces ("dimes"), 25 cent pieces ("quarters"), 50 cent pieces ("half dollars") and dollar coins were all composed of 80% silver (with, I believe, the balance being copper).
The first 5-cent US nickel was made in 1866, the 3-cent nickel in 1865, and the copper-nickel flying eagle 1-cent in 1856.
5 cent