One of the coins is not a dime (it is a quarter), but the other one is a dime.
To make 89 cents with 6 coins, you have to first realize that the "9" part of the cents is comprised of 5 cents and 4 pennies. Therefore, you have to have 4 pennies and 85 cents using 2 coins; impossible, since you would need 3 coins(if you had half-dollars) to make that amount: a half-dollar, quarter, and a dime. Basically, it's impossible with only coins worth 0.01, 0.05, 0.10, 0.25, and 0.50 of the currency(US$, I assume?)
it's possible only if there are 20 cent coins only for that 7 dollars 1 dollar = 100 cents, 100 cents = 5 of 20 cent coins since you need 5 of 20 cent coins for a dollar, you do 7 times of it. 7 X 5 = 35. Therefore, you need 35 of 20 cent coins for 7 dollars. (or there are 35 of 20 cent coins in 7 dollars)
Since the smallest of these currency values (the nickel) is equal to 5 cents, the number of five cent coins that go into a dollar is equal to 20. It is impossible to have a combination of 35 nickels and dimes whose sum is exactly equal to a dollar.
Many countries use cents as a minor currency unit and their 50 cent coins are not all the same size. Since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
6.45 is like 645 cents. 45 makes it round down since 100 cents= $1. Rounded, 645 would be 600, or 600 cents. Since 100 cents =$1, 600 cents = $6.
Australian coins have not changed since last year. General circulation coins are - 5, 10, 20 and 50 cents, and $1 and $2 coins.
Since 2002 Spain has used the euro as its currency. Its coins are denominated in euro cents so the names are simply denominations; e.g. 2 euros, 10 cents, etc.Before the euro was adopted Spanish coins were denominated in pesetas.
To make 89 cents with 6 coins, you have to first realize that the "9" part of the cents is comprised of 5 cents and 4 pennies. Therefore, you have to have 4 pennies and 85 cents using 2 coins; impossible, since you would need 3 coins(if you had half-dollars) to make that amount: a half-dollar, quarter, and a dime. Basically, it's impossible with only coins worth 0.01, 0.05, 0.10, 0.25, and 0.50 of the currency(US$, I assume?)
Since 2002 the Italian currency has been the Euro. The coins are as follows: Cents: 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50. Euros: 1 and 2.
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.
it's possible only if there are 20 cent coins only for that 7 dollars 1 dollar = 100 cents, 100 cents = 5 of 20 cent coins since you need 5 of 20 cent coins for a dollar, you do 7 times of it. 7 X 5 = 35. Therefore, you need 35 of 20 cent coins for 7 dollars. (or there are 35 of 20 cent coins in 7 dollars)
$544.32 in cents made since 1982$437.56 in cents made before 1982Explanation:If you're referring to US cents made after 1982, these coins weigh 2.5 gm each. A US pound is 453.6 gm so one pound of pennies contains 453.6/2.5 = 181.44 coins. Multiply that by 300 to get 54,432 cents. Cents made before 1982 weigh 3.11 gm so the same calculation is 300 * 453.6 / 3.11 = 43,756 cents
Lincoln cents like this are novelty coins and have no numismatic value, the maps were not applied to the coins by the US Mint. As for value you will have to find someone that wants them or try eBay.
The US has 4 Mints and all of them strike pennies (cents, actually). Effectively all circulating cents are made at the mints in Philadelphia (no mint mark on that denomination) and at Denver (a "D" under the date). The San Francisco mint ("S") strikes proof coins for sale to collectors, but they haven't made any circulating cents since 1974. The West Point mint normally only makes bullion and commemorative coins, but when demand for cents is extremely high they sometimes will make circulating cents as well. These coins don't have a "W" mint mark, though, so they look just like Philadelphia cents - there's no way to tell them apart.
Coins are produced by the US Mint which is part of the Treasury Department. The Mint currently strikes coins in 4 facilities: Philadelphia, "P" mint mark since 1979/80 on all coins made there except cents Denver, "D" mint mark on all coins made there San Francisco, "S" West Point, "W" Since the 1970s only Denver and Philadelphia have produced coins for circulation, while proof coins are made in San Francisco and special collectors' coins, bullion coins, and commemoratives are made at West Point.
The motto In God We Trust appears on all Lincoln cents, and has been on all denominations of US coins since 1938 and paper bills since 1963.Note that the motto isn't "printed" because coins aren't printed; they're said to be struck.
That answer depends on which country. In Britain, the penny denomination has been used since the 9th century and possibly earlier. The US technically has cents instead of pennies but the slang usage is almost universal. The first official 1¢ coins were minted in 1793, although other coins called cents or pennies were minted during the Revolution. Canada also used cents; they were minted from 1858 to 2013.