You have in your pocket a nickel and a quarter. (One of them is not a quarter- The other one is.) :)
a Dime. 10 cents
6 A 'quarter'and 5 'one cents'
Yes, you can make seventy-four cents with nine coins: quarter, quarter, dime, nickel, nickel, penny, penny, penny, penny
A quarter, a nickel, and a dime make forty cents.
How can you make 88 cents
It would be a quarter an a nickel. The question said one of the coins is not a nickel, not both.
A nickel and a half dollar. The OTHER coin is the nickel.
A quarter and a nickel, it says one is not a quarter so the other has to be a quarter.
a Dime. 10 cents
* a nickel , penny, quarter * quarter penny nickel REASON: you said 1 wasn't a penny never said 2 or 3 wasnt ha ha ha
6 A 'quarter'and 5 'one cents'
Yes, you can make seventy-four cents with nine coins: quarter, quarter, dime, nickel, nickel, penny, penny, penny, penny
A quarter plus a quarter is a half. In U.S. coins, two quarters equals 50 cents.
In US currency, a quarter (25 cents) and a nickel (5 cents.)
25 cents. It's normally called a Washington quarter. Check your pocket change - ALL American coins carry the word Liberty so that's not anything special.
The puzzle actually reads "What two coins equal 30 cents but one of them is not a nickel?"The answer of course is a quarter and a nickel. The quarter is the coin that's not a nickel!
A quarter and a dime