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18 November, 00:30

Sasha has 3.20 in U. S. coins. She has the same number of quarters and nickels. What is the greatest number of quarters she could have?

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Answers (2)
  1. 18 November, 00:38
    0
    10 quarters = $2.50

    10 nickels = $0.50

    that leaves $0.20 for other coins (dimes / pennies)

    Step-by-step explanation:

    First, suppose she has only quarters and nickels and no other coins. Then if C is the identical number of coins of each type, then 5C + 25C = 320, so 30C = 320 and 3C = 32, but there is no integer solution to this. So she must have at least one other type of coin.

    Assume she has only quarters, nickels, and dimes. Then if D is the number of dimes, 5C + 25C + 10D = 320, which means 30C + 10D = 320, or 3C + D = 32. The smallest D can be is 2, leaving 3C = 30 and thus C = 10. So in this scenario she would have 10 quarters, 10 nickels, and two dimes to make $2.50 + $0.50 + $0.20 = $3.20.

    This has to be the highest number, because if she had 11 quarters and 11 nickels, that alone would add up to 11 (0.25) + 11 (0.05) = $3.30, which would already be too much.
  2. 18 November, 00:52
    0
    2.50 coins
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