50 pennies or fifty cents are in a fifty cent piece or a half dollar.
10 pennies, 4 nickels, and 7 dimes, or 5 pennies, 13 nickels, and 3 dimes.
1 50cent piece 2 dimes 1 nickel 3 pennies
Not currently. Using discontinued American currency, you could use 15 pennies, a nickel, a 3-cent piece and a 2-cent piece.
In the US, only two ways: one nickel and four pennies or nine pennies. If there were a two cent piece (as there was at one time in Britain) it would make the question more interesting.
chris needs 15 pennies to buy a piece of candy. he has 9. how many more pennies does he need?
Like the name is saying: Six pennies are in a sixpence piece.
50 pennies or fifty cents are in a fifty cent piece or a half dollar.
Mobile means both movable and a piece of artwork suspended in air. They are homographs with the same spelling, but different pronunciations and meanings.
Give me a break Give me a break Break me off a piece of that Kit Kat Bar Its got a chocolaty taste that'll make your day Everywhere we go you hear the people say Give me a break Give me a break Break me off a piece of that Gotta have a piece of that Break me off a piece of that Kit Kat Bar!!
'give me a break, give me a break, break me off a piece of that kit-kat bar, choclatley chewy, gotta make your day, every where we go we hear the people sing, HEY, give me a break, HEY, give me a break, break me off a piece of that, gotta have a piece of that, break me off a piece of that kit-kat bar.'
A dollar coin, a fifty-cent piece and 7 pennies.
a 50 cent piece and 9 pennies
40 pennies, a 50 cent piece and 2 dimes
50 cent piece quarter dime 3 pennies
fifty cent piece ,a nickel and four pennies
A 50 cent piece 15 pennies a dime and a quarter