The answer depends on the country or region that you are referring to. For example, the US has a 25 cent coin but not a 20 cent coin. The Eurozone, on the other hand, has a 20 cent coin but not a 25. And since you have not bothered to clarify the region, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
Assuming that they are current US coins, 2 Dimes and 1 Nickel. If they were obsolete denominations, they could also be a 20 Cent Coin, a 3 Cent Coin and a 2 Cent Coin.
There are many countries (or regions) that use cents as their minor currency units. They do not all have the same coinage. For example, the US has a 25 cent coin but not a 20 cent coin whereas the Eurozone has a 20 cent coin but not a 25 cent coin. Thus, it is necessary to know which country or region the question refers to. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
There are many countries (or regions) that use cents as their minor currency units. They do not all have the same coinage. For example, the US has a 25 cent coin but not a 20 cent coin whereas the Eurozone has a 20 cent coin but not a 25 cent coin. Thus, it is necessary to know which country or region the question refers to. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
There are many countries (or regions) that use cents as their minor currency units. They do not all have the same coinage. For example, the US has a 25 cent coin but not a 20 cent coin whereas the Eurozone has a 20 cent coin but not a 25 cent coin. Thus, it is necessary to know which country or region the question refers to. But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
A quarter
The answer depends on what part of the world the question is about. The Eurozone has a 20 cent coin but not a 25 cent coin. The US, which is smaller, has a 25 cent coin but not a 20.
A 5 cent coin in the United States, commonly known as a nickel, is composed of 75% copper and 25% nickel.
25 CENT
25 cents
25 cents
The answer depends on which country's (or countries') currency. That determines the coinage available. In the Eurozone, for example, there is a 20 cent coin but not a 25. In the US there is a 25 cent coin but not a 20 cent coin.
George Washington is on the 25-cent coin, not the 1-cent coin.
In the United States, the 25 cent coin is better known as the quarter. The face of President George Washington is on the front of the quarter.
A "quarter" is the slang name for a 25-cent coin in both the US and Canada, because 25 cents is one-fourth of a dollar.
A 1961 Canadian 25-cent coin can be worth about $6. A coin's actual value would be based on the silver market at the time of purchase or sale.
No there is not and there cannot be. There are a number of countries which use a dollar as its major currency unit. Among these are Australia and the US. Australia has a 20 cent coin but not a 25 cent coin whereas the US has a 25 cent coin but not a 20 cent coin. Also the smallest Australian coin is a 5 cent coin. The number of ways of making change for a dollar in Australia and US will, therefore, be different.