a quarter and a nickel cuz one is not a nickel n one is
25 cents plus 5 cents = 30 cents. One of these coins is not a nickel.
A dime, a nickel, and a penny (10 cents plus 5 cents plus 1 cent = 16 cents)
To make 53 cents with five coins, you can use two quarters (25 cents each), one nickel (5 cents), and two pennies (1 cent each). This combination adds up to 50 cents from the quarters and nickel, plus 3 cents from the two pennies, totaling 53 cents.
To make 95 cents with 5 coins, you can use one half-dollar coin (50 cents), one quarter (25 cents), one dime (10 cents), one nickel (5 cents), and one penny (1 cent). This combination totals 95 cents with exactly 5 coins.
55 cents
25 cents plus 5 cents = 30 cents. One of these coins is not a nickel.
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.
A dime, a nickel, and a penny (10 cents plus 5 cents plus 1 cent = 16 cents)
Three coins that equal 27 cents can be one quarter (25 cents) and one penny (2 cents). Alternatively, you could use two dimes (20 cents) and one nickel (5 cents) for a total of 25 cents, plus two pennies to reach 27 cents. However, the simplest combination is one quarter and two pennies.
There is only one combination of two coins that will equal 11 cents. That would be one dime and one penny. Since the question limits us by stating that one coin is not a penny, then clearly the OTHER coin *must* be a penny.
To make 53 cents with five coins, you can use two quarters (25 cents each), one nickel (5 cents), and two pennies (1 cent each). This combination adds up to 50 cents from the quarters and nickel, plus 3 cents from the two pennies, totaling 53 cents.
A nickel, two quarters, and a penny equal 56 cents.
Not possible using only current denominations (1 cent, 5 cents, 10 cents). Allowing for obsolete denominations (current plus 1/2 cent, 2 cent, 3 cent): -- 2 half cents and 2 nickels -- 3 two cents and 1 nickel -- 1 two cents and 3 three cents -- 1 cent, 1 two cents, 1 three cent and 1 nickel
If you have four coins totaling 45 cents, the possible combinations typically include three dimes and one nickel, as this adds up to 30 cents (3 dimes) plus 5 cents (1 nickel), totaling 45 cents. Another possible combination could be two dimes and one quarter, but that would exceed the four-coin limit. Hence, the most likely configuration is three dimes and one nickel.
A nickel is worth 5 cents. A quarter is worth 25 cents. Together the total is 30 cents.
To make $1.78 using six coins, you could use the following combination: three quarters (75 cents), two dimes (20 cents), and one nickel (5 cents). This adds up to $1.75 from the quarters and dimes, plus the nickel for a total of $1.78. Other combinations may also work, but this is one example.
A dime plus a nickel plus 5 pennies add up to 20 cents.