With dimes and nickels, you cannot make any amount of change that does not end in a 0 or 5.
2 dimes, 8 pennies, 1 dime 18 pennies
0 dimes + 7 nickles 1 dimes + 5 nickles 2 dimes + 3 nickles 3 dimes + 1 nickles
Well, honey, let me break it down for you. You can use up to 3 quarters, 0-5 dimes, and 0-15 nickels to make 75 cents. So, there are a total of 4 ways to make change for 75 cents using quarters, dimes, and nickels. Hope that clears things up for ya!
There are 18 possible combinations of quarters, dimes and nickels that total 75 cents. They are: 1) -- 3 Quarters 2) -- 2 Quarters, 2 Dimes, 1 Nickel 3) -- 2 Quarters, 1 Dime, 3 Nickels 4) -- 2 Quarters, 5 Nickels 5) -- 1 Quarter, 5 Dimes 6) -- 1 Quarter, 4 Dimes, 2 Nickels 7) -- 1 Quarter, 3 Dimes, 4 Nickels 8) -- 1 Quarter, 2 Dimes, 6 Nickels 9) -- 1 Quarter, 1 Dime, 8 Nickels 10) -- 1 Quarter, 10 Nickels 11) -- 7 Dimes, 1 Nickel 12) -- 6 Dimes, 3 Nickels 13) -- 5 Dimes, 5 Nickels 14) -- 4 Dimes, 7 Nickels 15) -- 3 Dimes, 9 Nickels 16) -- 2 Dimes, 11 Nickels 17) -- 1 Dime, 13 Nickels 18) -- 15 Nickels
You can make 43 US cents using three dimes, two nickels, and three cents. (3 x 10) + (2 x 5) + (3 x 1) = 43
2 dimes, 8 pennies, 1 dime 18 pennies
A dime is ten cents, so five times makes 50 cents. A dollar is 100 cents, so five dimes only makes half of a dollar.
0 dimes + 7 nickles 1 dimes + 5 nickles 2 dimes + 3 nickles 3 dimes + 1 nickles
19
Well, honey, let me break it down for you. You can use up to 3 quarters, 0-5 dimes, and 0-15 nickels to make 75 cents. So, there are a total of 4 ways to make change for 75 cents using quarters, dimes, and nickels. Hope that clears things up for ya!
None. If you "get 65 cents using only dimes nickels and quarters" you are not using any pennies!
Three different ways.
To make 55 cents using only nickels (5 cents) and dimes (10 cents), we can set up the equation (5n + 10d = 55), where (n) is the number of nickels and (d) is the number of dimes. Simplifying this gives (n + 2d = 11). The possible values for (d) range from 0 to 5 (since 2d must be less than or equal to 11), leading to the pairs: (11, 0), (9, 1), (7, 2), (5, 3), (3, 4), and (1, 5). Thus, there are 6 ways to make 55 cents with nickels and dimes.
There are 18 possible combinations of quarters, dimes and nickels that total 75 cents. They are: 1) -- 3 Quarters 2) -- 2 Quarters, 2 Dimes, 1 Nickel 3) -- 2 Quarters, 1 Dime, 3 Nickels 4) -- 2 Quarters, 5 Nickels 5) -- 1 Quarter, 5 Dimes 6) -- 1 Quarter, 4 Dimes, 2 Nickels 7) -- 1 Quarter, 3 Dimes, 4 Nickels 8) -- 1 Quarter, 2 Dimes, 6 Nickels 9) -- 1 Quarter, 1 Dime, 8 Nickels 10) -- 1 Quarter, 10 Nickels 11) -- 7 Dimes, 1 Nickel 12) -- 6 Dimes, 3 Nickels 13) -- 5 Dimes, 5 Nickels 14) -- 4 Dimes, 7 Nickels 15) -- 3 Dimes, 9 Nickels 16) -- 2 Dimes, 11 Nickels 17) -- 1 Dime, 13 Nickels 18) -- 15 Nickels
Two dimes and four pennies.
To determine how many different ways you can make 23 cents using U.S. coins (pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters), you can use combinatorial counting. By examining the various combinations of these coins, you find there are 13 distinct ways to make 23 cents. This includes different combinations of the available coin types, such as using only pennies, or a mix of nickels and dimes, etc.
You can make 43 US cents using three dimes, two nickels, and three cents. (3 x 10) + (2 x 5) + (3 x 1) = 43