Coins and banknotes have their value written on them. Different values can be used together to buy things.
Exercise $1.8$
$1$.How many cents is each of these coins worth?

Penny: $1$
Nickel: $5$
Dime: $10$
Quarter dollar: $25$
Half dollar: $50$
$2$.Erin used a Carroll diagram to sort US$ banknotes and coins.
Which coins or banknotes are missing from each section?
Draw them in the correct places on the Carroll diagram.

Missing items are:
• Quarter coin: $25$ c (odd value)
• $5$-dollar banknote (odd value)
• $20$-dollar banknote (not odd value)
$3$.Marcus spent $50$c on some candy.
He did not have a half dollar coin.
Which other coins could he pay with?
Examples of ways to make $50$c without a half dollar coin:
• $2$ quarters ($2 \times 25 = 50$)
• $5$ dimes ($5 \times 10 = 50$)
• $10$ nickels ($10 \times 5 = 50$)
• $50$ pennies ($50 \times 1 = 50$)
• $1$ quarter + $2$ dimes + $1$ nickel ($25 + 20 + 5 = 50$)
• $1$ quarter + $1$ dime + $3$ nickels ($25 + 10 + 15 = 50$)
Task: Zara says there must be at least $10$ different ways to make $20$c. Do you agree? How many different ways can you find?
Check each way you find by adding the coin values carefully.
Method:
Follow-up Questions:
$4$.Zara spent US$25$ on a T-shirt.
Which banknotes could she pay with?
Examples of ways to pay US$25$ using banknotes:
• US$20$ + US$5$
• US$10$ + US$10$ + US$5$
• US$5$ + US$5$ + US$5$ + US$5$ + US$5$
(Any combination of available banknotes that adds to US$25$ is correct.)
Task: You have $2$ different banknotes. Each banknote is less than US$100$. How much could you have?
Have you found all the possible answers?
Share your ways to pay US$100$ by checking your solutions carefully.
Method:
Follow-up Questions:
$5$.Arun spent US$8$ and $60$c in the supermarket.
Which banknotes and coins could he pay with?
One way is to pay US$8$ with banknotes, and $60$c with coins:
• Banknotes: US$5$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ = US$8$
• Coins: $50$c + $10$c = $60$c
Here are some other examples (many answers are possible):
• Banknotes: US$10$ (then you would need $1$ dollar change back), and coins: $50$c + $10$c
• Banknotes: US$5$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$, and coins: $25$c + $25$c + $10$c
• Banknotes: US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$, and coins: $20$c + $20$c + $10$c + $10$c
Any combination of US banknotes and coins that totals US$8$ and $60$c is correct.
$6$.Find the total amount of money in each row and each column.
Two answers have been done for you.

Row totals
Row $1$: US$12$ and $50$c
Row $2$: US$5$ and $35$c
Row $3$: US$70$ and $5$c
Column totals
Column $1$: US$22$ and $25$c
Column $2$: US$5$ and $55$c
Column $3$: US$60$ and $10$c
Let’s investigate
Work on your own.
Think of a US coin or banknote.
Ask yourself questions, for example, “Is it a coin?” “Is it worth more than a dime?”
You can only answer yes or no.
Method:
Follow-up Question:
1: Sometimes yes, sometimes no — it depends on how “smart” your questions are.
To make it work in only 3 questions, pick questions that split the possibilities as much as possible each time (like a decision tree). A strong set is:
Math idea hiding inside: each yes/no question gives 1 bit of information, so 3 questions can distinguish up to $2^3 = 8$ possibilities if your questions split the choices efficiently.