22
22
I think there are 88 different combinations of coins that can make up 66 cents.
It depends on the currency - many countries use cents - and the denominations of the coins.
Well, honey, you've got yourself a math problem. To make 85 cents using those coins, you can have combinations like 1 fifty cent coin, 1 twenty-five cent coin, 1 five cent coin, and 1 five cent coin. That's just one way to do it, but there are multiple combinations you can come up with to make a total of 85 cents using those coins.
22
22
12 how come
A lot
I think there are 88 different combinations of coins that can make up 66 cents.
It depends on the currency - many countries use cents - and the denominations of the coins.
Well, honey, you've got yourself a math problem. To make 85 cents using those coins, you can have combinations like 1 fifty cent coin, 1 twenty-five cent coin, 1 five cent coin, and 1 five cent coin. That's just one way to do it, but there are multiple combinations you can come up with to make a total of 85 cents using those coins.
4 quarters or 10 dimes or 20 nickels or 100 pennies. One dollar is equal to 100 cents so many combinations of coins can be used.
This question cannot be answered because many countries use cents as a unit of currency and these countries have different coins. Without knowing which coinage system you refer to, there can be no proper answer.
1966 is the first year that the Bahamas had its own coins since gaining independence, and there were many coins minted that year. Despite the fact that the 50 Cents and 1 Dollar coins are made with silver, alas, the 25 Cents coin was made of nickel.
If the question concerned the number of combinations of three different coins, the answer is 23-1 = 7. If the coins are a,b,and c, the combinations are a, b, c, ab, ac, bc, abc. If two of the coins are the same there are only 5 combinations and if all three are the same there are 3.
Total mintage of U.S. Lincoln cents for 1930 was: 221,801,000 coins.