You have 6 coins. Put them in 2 rows, with 4 in each row

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You have 6 coins, 4 - pennies and 2 - 2 cents pieces?

1 - 1 - 2 = 4 cents
1 - 1 - 2 = 4 cents

So there you have 6 coins, 2 rows and 4 in each row? Correct?
 
BojTrek said:
You have 6 coins, 4 - pennies and 2 - 2 cents pieces?

1 - 1 - 2 = 4 cents
1 - 1 - 2 = 4 cents

So there you have 6 coins, 2 rows and 4 in each row? Correct?

is there any country with a 2 cent piece?
 
US Two Cent Piece


Years of Production: 1864 through 1873
Compostion: Copper, tin and zinc
Minted at: Two cent pieces were struck at the Philadelphia Mint
Location of Mint Mark: No mint mark - all two cent pieces were struck at the Philadelphia Mint
Designer: The two cent piece was designed by James B. Longacre
Comments: The two cent piece was the first coin to carry the phrase, "In God We Trust." Click coins at right to view obverse and reverse coin detail.

two-cent-piece-reverse-120.jpg


two-cent-piece-obverse-120.jpg
 
Years of Production: 1864 through 1873 :lol

so that makes that post... worthless...... Let's talk about greenbacks while we are at it
 
You know, it's a hell of a lot easier if you use Canadian coinage.

Toonie + 2 Loonies
Toonie + 2 Loonies

Voila.
 
You have 6 dollars. Put them in 2 rows, with 4 in each row.

That's a more valid riddle today being that we still have $2 bills in circulation.
 
Jeffahn said:
What I was thinking. People automatically assume you have to have seperate rows.

...

These kind of things are directed at thinking outside the box.

My answer may be wrong (I rarely get these kind of riddles sorted out), but it was a good try, no?
 
Jeffahn said:
What I was thinking. People automatically assume you have to have seperate rows.

...

I know its supposed to be lateral thinking, but you *do* have to have separate rows. That above is *one* row. They can touch/overlap, but there needs to be two of them.

I hope. I'm crap at these puzzle donkey type things.
 
Take five of the coins and make an cross, put the last coin on top of the coin in the middle.

..X
XOX
..X

X=1 coin
o=2 coins
 
mrklaw said:
I know its supposed to be lateral thinking, but you *do* have to have separate rows. That above is *one* row. They can touch/overlap, but there needs to be two of them.

I hope. I'm crap at these puzzle donkey type things.

No, that's the first time you've mentioned "seperate".

...
 
Wouldn't the above solution have three rows (the third one being vertical as it has two coins?)

I like better the solution with 1 and 2 dollar coins, well at least we have 2 dollar coins in Canada, not sure about the US.
 
The UK also uses 2 pence (Tuppence) pieces.

And the answer to that old riddle is indeed... the cross (with the middle containing two coins).
 
gblues said:
That's a stupid riddle. A cross is not two rows. It is a row and a column!

Nathan

For those brought up on Excel yeah I guess.

Traditional definition of "row" is not so stringent, in fact the relevant definition for "column," as in non-architectual, is identical to "row." This riddle is an old one, and I like it.
 
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