You can use:
1 quarter and 75 pennies
2 quarters and 50 pennies
3 quarters and 25 pennies
4 quarters and no pennies
100 pennies and no quarters
Two quarters Three nickels Three pennies
3 quarters 2 nickles 4 pennies
3 quarters, one dime, 4 pennies
If you have 7 coins that equal $1.07 and cannot use a half dollar, dime, or nickel, you must be using quarters and pennies. You could have 3 quarters and 4 pennies, as 3 quarters equal $0.75 and 4 pennies equal $0.04, totaling $1.07.
A half dollar and five pennies
292 ... 293 if you decide to use the dollar coin too.
There are 2 solutions (if you include the non-use of quarters): 1 Quarter, 2 Dimes, 2 Nickels, 45 Pennies No Quarters, 2 Dimes, 8 Nickels, 40 Pennies
4 Quarters= 1 dollar 10 dimes = 1 dollar 20 nickels = 1 dollar 2 half dollars = 1 dollar 1 Susan B. Anthony Coin = 1 dollar 1 Hiawatha Coin = 1 dollar 3 Quarters + 2 Dimes + 1 nickel = 1 dollar And just for an added bonus a bag of quarters is 65 pounds, contains 4000 coins, and is worth $1,000.
2 quarters, 3 dimes, 3 nickels and 5 pennies
3 quarters 3 nickles 10 pennies
None. If you "get 65 cents using only dimes nickels and quarters" you are not using any pennies!
The phrase "how many ways can a dollar be broken up" typically refers to the different combinations of coins that can make up one dollar. In the United States, a dollar can be broken down using pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, and half dollars. The exact number of combinations is quite large due to the myriad ways these coins can be combined. For example, using just pennies and quarters, there are thousands of possible combinations to reach one dollar.
Two quarters Three nickels Three pennies
3 quarters 2 nickles 4 pennies
40 pennies 8 nickles 2 dimes
3 quarters, one dime, 4 pennies
If you have 7 coins that equal $1.07 and cannot use a half dollar, dime, or nickel, you must be using quarters and pennies. You could have 3 quarters and 4 pennies, as 3 quarters equal $0.75 and 4 pennies equal $0.04, totaling $1.07.