Well 3 20's, 3 10's and 3 5's would be $105.
No, all US bills regardless of denomination are the same size. This makes them easier to handle by machines.
Assuming you have a large coin with a picture of Miss Liberty walking and the sun in the background, you have a bullion coin sold for its silver content and not for spending. The dollar denomination is artificial. At the current price of silver it's worth about $17.
$1.19 {3 Quarters or a Half-Dollar and a Quarter, 4 dimes, and 4 pennies.}
1 dollar, 1 half dollar, 4 dimes and a nickel.
The American Eagle Gold Bullion coins with the denomination of $5 are 1/10th ounce of pure gold. Current market value is about $163.00.
The largest denomination in the Bahamas is baptist *OR* The largest denomination in the Bahamas is the 100 dollar note with a picture of Queen Elizabeth II on the front.
A 100 dollar note is the largest.
The largest denomination of IS currency is the $100.00 bill.
The largest denomination of IS currency is the $100.00 bill.
No. The largest denomination ever printed was $100,000.
At present, the largest denomination still in production and circulation is $100.
No. The largest denomination the U.S. ever printed was $100,000.
The $100,000 bill with President Wilson on the bill
Only as a novelty. The largest real denomination ever printed was $100,000.
Largest size or largest denomination? The largest denomination in common use would be the Japanese 500 Yen coin (~$5 US/Canadian) The largest denomination that is theoretically legal tender would be the 1 Million dollar face value 100 Kilogram gold Canadian coin, although its intrinsic value of the gold is worth much more than the 1 million dollar face value! As for the largest size, in common circulation I'd say it would be something roughly the size of the US Eisenhower dollar which still occasionally circulates.
The denomination of any and all Dollar notes is One Dollar.
The largest denomination note released for circulation was for $10,000. The largest denomination ever printed was a small group of $100,000 gold certificates printed in 1934 and 1935; these were only used for transferring money between government departments.