There are 250.
A quarter is 25 cents. Two dollars is 200 cents and 10 nickels is 50 cents, for a total of 250 cents. That's the same as 250/25 = 10 quarters.
Fifty Each nickel is 5 cents or $ 0.05 Divide the 2.50 by .05 which is 250/5 = 50
Well, honey, 5000 nickels is $250. Each nickel is worth 5 cents, so when you have 5000 of them bad boys, you're looking at a nice chunk of change. Just make sure you don't go throwing all that money around like you're some big shot!
250
There are 250.
A quarter is 25 cents. Two dollars is 200 cents and 10 nickels is 50 cents, for a total of 250 cents. That's the same as 250/25 = 10 quarters.
It would take approximately 250 billion nickels, stacked one on top of the other, to reach from the Earth to the Moon. This calculation is based on the average distance between the Earth and the Moon, and the thickness of a nickel.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! If you have 500 nickels, each worth 5 cents, you can simply multiply 500 by 5 to find the total amount. That would be 2500 cents, which is equal to 25 dollars. Just imagine all the beautiful colors you could paint with that!
NICKELS dated 1940 & 1941 arre made from .750 copper and .250 nickel.
Fifty Each nickel is 5 cents or $ 0.05 Divide the 2.50 by .05 which is 250/5 = 50
A nickel is worth 5 cents so a roll of 40 has a value of $2. 25 rolls at $2 each = $2 * 25 = $50
For US 5 cent coins,except for the War Nickels dated 1942-1945 that have 35% silver in them, all nickels from 1866 to 2010 are made from a copper nickel alloy of .750 copper and .250 nickel
Well, honey, if we're talking about nickels, there are 100 nickels in a pound. So, 50 pounds of nickels would be 5,000 nickels. And if we do the math, 5,000 nickels would be worth $250. Hope that helps, sugar!
The amount of 'nickel' in a nickel has not changed, it's still .250.
The same thing as now .750 copper & .250 nickel Regardless of popular misunderstandings, only silver coins were changed after 1964. Pennies and nickels (except for "war nickels") don't have silver so their composition stayed the same.
Assuming "100" means "$100", there are 20 nickels in a dollar so $100 is 2000 nickels. US nickels weigh 5 gm so 2000 of them weigh 5*2000 = 10,000 gm, or 10 kg. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so 2000 of them weigh 3.95*2000 = 7900 gm, or 7.9 kg.