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?
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?
950
The British One Pound coin weighs 9.5 grams. Therefore, 100 One Pound coins weighs 950 grams or 0.95 kilograms.
6oz
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.
To make 1 unit using 5c, 20c, and 50c coins, we can represent 1 unit as 100 cents. The combinations can vary based on the number of each coin used, but generally, you can use different counts of each denomination to reach the total. For example, you can use 0 to 2 of the 50c coins, and then adjust the number of 20c and 5c coins accordingly. Calculating all possible combinations would yield a total of 12 different ways to make 1 unit.
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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