The English Pound is comprised of one hundred pence. Therefore ten pence would require ten pennies and to reach one pound you would need ten 'ten-pence' coins.
Accordingly, to achieve one pound or £1 Sterling in twenty pence coins you would need five coins. Finally, 15 twenty pence coins would equal £3 or Three pounds.
Britain's coins are comprised 1p (penny) 2p (tuppence), 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p then
£1 (one Pound) and £2 (two pound coins)
We do not have £1 notes or 'bills' as Americans call them. However, in Scotland they are still in circulation. Scottish currency is interchangeable between England and Scotland...however occasionally some individuals can, for whatever reason, be reluctant to accept them.
Our notes comprise of:
£5, £10, £20, and £50. There are no larger notes. This is for an important reason; specifically to help control and monitor money laundering.
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Oh, what a happy little question! You can make one pound using different combinations of coins. You can use 100 one-penny coins, or 50 two-penny coins, or 20 five-penny coins, or 10 ten-penny coins, or 5 twenty-penny coins, or 2 fifty-penny coins. Just mix and match those coins and let your creativity shine!
To make a pound using only 50p, 20p, and 10p coins, we can set up a linear Diophantine equation: 50x + 20y + 10z = 100, where x, y, and z are the number of each type of coin used. We can then use techniques such as generating functions or modular arithmetic to solve this equation and find the number of ways to make a pound. The solution will involve finding the integer solutions to the equation within a certain range, as there are constraints on the number of each type of coin available.
30p = 20p + 5p + 5p 40p = 20p + 10p + 10p
Well, honey, if you spend 25p from 50p, you'll get 20p and 5p coins back in change. It's basic math, nothing to lose sleep over. Just make sure you count your coins before strutting out of the store like a boss.
10 because if you count up in two's it goes- 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 So 10 times