No, you can do it all in 100 dollar bills or 5 dollar bills.
Really? whole numbers are like dollar bills. if there is no change then $1.00 can be just $1 a whole number, no decimals, and so can all other total dollar amounts.
8 5 dollar bills
He would have five ten-dollar bills and eight five-dollar bills.
It's a plate marker indicating where the particular bill was located in the large sheet of bills that are printed all at the same time. It doesn't affect the bill's value in any way. Other bills will have different numbers.
not rare at all they are counterfeit broski
No, you can do it all in 100 dollar bills or 5 dollar bills.
Really? whole numbers are like dollar bills. if there is no change then $1.00 can be just $1 a whole number, no decimals, and so can all other total dollar amounts.
If they are US two dollar bills, yes. Contrary to popular misunderstanding, $2 bills are and always have been legal tender. The denomination has never been discontinued. It's only printed in relatively small numbers (less than 1% of all currency) but that still amounts to hundreds of millions of bills.
All U.S. bills currently in circulation are the same size.
According to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 45% of all U.S. currency printed are one-dollar bills.
All bills are wrapped in amounts of 50
The answer depends on the size of the class room as well as the size of the ten dollar bills. Many countries use dollars as their currency and have ten dollar bills. These are not all the same size!
It's a plate marker indicating where the particular bill was located in the large sheet of bills that are printed all at the same time. It doesn't affect the bill's value in any way. Other bills will have different numbers.
150 dimes in money is 150 dimes...since dimes are money, too. or if you mean how many dollars... divide by 10...15 dollars 5 dollar bills? 3 five dollar bills quarters? 60 quarters. nickles? 300 nickles pennies? 1500 pennies All in all....It is all worth $15
If you take a million dollars out of your bank account and the teller gives it to you all in $100 bills, you walk out of the bank with 10,000 bills.
Yes, both $2 bills and dollar coins are legal tender in the United States, so you can spend them just like any other form of currency. However, not all businesses may readily accept them, so you may need to check before trying to use them.