120
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the tough math questions, huh? Well, technically speaking, 10 divided by 5 cents equals 2, so you'd need 2 five-cent coins to make 10. But like, who even uses coins anymore, am I right?
950
Tentatively I will say $4.35, with for instance: 19 x 20c 1 x 50c 1 x 5c It's possible that a rigorous method exists, but this is just a fudged guess. Any advances on it?
6oz
The British One Pound coin weighs 9.5 grams. Therefore, 100 One Pound coins weighs 950 grams or 0.95 kilograms.
two
48 i think
There are 14 five cent coins in 70 cents.
The echidna is on the Australian 5c piece.
3 dimes 13 nickles 5 pennies
80, because there are 400 cents in 4 Dollars, and 400 divided by 5 = 80.
The only animal to appear on the 5c coin in US currency is the buffalo (1913-1938) Canadian 5c coins normally have a picture of a beaver building a dam, although special commemoratives issued during the 1967 Centennial carry a picture of a snowshoe hare. Australian 5c coins have a picture of an echidna, which is an unusual egg-laying mammal found only in that country. New Zealand 5c coins carried a picture of a reptile called a tuatara. The denomination was eliminated in 2006 due to low purchasing power.
There are 5 carbon atoms in 5C.
There are currently (as of 2012) six coins in general circulation in Singapore; 1c, 5c, 10c, 20c, 50c and $1.
If that is an equation: 5c = 10 then the value of c is 2
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exactly 950