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.
It's a plate number identifying the printing plate used to print that particular bill. All US bills have both plate numbers and position numbers indicating where in the plate the bill's engraving was positioned.
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.
It's just an expression: "As Queer As A One-Dollar Bill...." One dollar bills are especially common--the most common dollar bill at all: Normal.
According to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 45% of all U.S. currency printed are one-dollar bills.
8 5 dollar bills
All U.S. bills currently in circulation are the same size.
All bills are wrapped in amounts of 50
He would have five ten-dollar bills and eight five-dollar bills.
If you mean "how many 100 bills weigh a pound", the answer is slightly more than 453. The standard weight of all US bills is 1 gm and there are 453.6 gm in one US pound.