One of the coins is not a dime (it is a quarter), but the other one is a dime.
a Dime. 10 cents
You have two coins - A and BOnly one of them (say A) is not a nickel, that one is a 50cThe other one (B) is a nickel.Look at it from this angle.... we all have 2 parents, and one of them is not a man.
25 cents plus 5 cents = 30 cents. One of these coins is not a nickel.
With US coins, a half-dollar and two nickels, or two quarters and a dime. If you have 20-cent coins, 3 of those, or the 50 cent and two 5 cent coins.
You have provided insufficient information to answer the question. You would need to tell either (i) the total number of coins or (ii) the exact total value.
80 cents one-third of six is two, so two dimes is 20 cents if one-fourth is 20 cents then her total amount is 80 cents
A half dollar (which is not a nickel) and a nickel.
Two quarters = 50 cents.
penny dime quarter
A half dollar and a nickel. One of them isn't a nickel, the other one is.
If I understand you correctly, you have two quarters. One quarter is worth 25 cents, that times two equals 50 cents!
The two coins that are 30 cents are a nickel and a quarter.
A half dollar and a nickel. One of them isn't a nickel, the other one is.
If one of the coins is not a quarter, then the other coin is; plus a nickel, one would still attain a cumulative value of 30 cents.
One of the coins is not a dime (it is a quarter), but the other one is a dime.
Coins rolls as rolled and distributed by the Royal Australian Mint contain coins as follows - 1 cent - 50 coins per roll - total 50 cents (withdrawn from circulation) 2 cents - 50 coins per roll - total One Dollar (withdrawn from circulation) 5 cents- 40 coins per roll - total Two Dollars 10 cents- 40 coins per roll - total Four Dollars 20 cents- 40 coins per roll - total Eight Dollars 50 cents- 20 coins per roll - total Ten Dollars 1 Dollar - 20 coins per roll - total Twenty Dollars 2 Dollars - 25 coins per roll - total Fifty Dollars