10:25 = 2:5
Well, honey, you could make 95 cents using quarters by using three quarters and one dime. That's 75 cents from the quarters and 10 cents from the dime, which adds up to 95 cents. Math can be a real gem sometimes, can't it?
2 quarters and a dime, or a half-dollar and 2 nickels.
$3 would be 12 quarters, 35 cents would contain one quarter and one dime. So your answer would be 13 quarters and 1 dime.
Four quarters and 1 dime.
To make 95 cents using 6 coins, you can use the following combination: three quarters (75 cents), one dime (10 cents), and two pennies (2 cents). This adds up to a total of 95 cents using exactly 6 coins.
Well, honey, you could make 95 cents using quarters by using three quarters and one dime. That's 75 cents from the quarters and 10 cents from the dime, which adds up to 95 cents. Math can be a real gem sometimes, can't it?
2 quarters and a dime, or a half-dollar and 2 nickels.
10 cents in a dime
23 cents
10/25 = 2/5 = 0.4 = 40%
1200 dimes multiplied by 10 cents per dime gives the monetary value of the coins in cents--12,000 cents. Dividing this by 25 cents, the value of a single quarter, gives the number of quarters, or 480.
(2) quarters, (1) dime and (1) penny = 61 cents.
$3 would be 12 quarters, 35 cents would contain one quarter and one dime. So your answer would be 13 quarters and 1 dime.
Four quarters and 1 dime.
Eighty-eight cents .
To make 95 cents using 6 coins, you can use the following combination: three quarters (75 cents), one dime (10 cents), and two pennies (2 cents). This adds up to a total of 95 cents using exactly 6 coins.
3 dimes 1 nickel and 3 pennies