Place value = 10 Face value = 2 Product = 20.
The 2 in 264 is worth 200.
Face value only.
0 has the least face value, 2 has the least place value.
Face value means the value of the digit in isolation.Place value means the value represented by the positionthat this digit sits within the number.If you take the number 10 for example:The first digit here "1" has a face value of 1. We just look at the digit in isolation and its face value is simply the value of the digit.However its place value is tens. That is because it sits in the place of the tens column of a number (second digit to the left of where the decimal point would go)For the number 200, the "2" has a face value of 2 and a place value of hundreds as it sits in the hundreds column of a number.
Place value = 10 Face value = 2 Product = 20.
Its place value is 20 but its face value is 2
2000000-2
The 2 in 264 is worth 200.
200 :)
The face value of any bill or coin is its denomination - i.e. the value printed / struck on its face. So, the face value of any $2 bill is 2 dollars.The collector value of a bill may be a lot higher or in some cases lower than its face value, though, depending on supply and demand. In the case of a 1976 $2 bill, so many were printed that any you find in circulation are only worth $2 to a collector as well. A nice-quality uncirculated one might sell for all of $3.
Its worth no more than its face value. 2$
It is worth face value unless it is uncirculated.
Face value only.
The face value of any coin or bill is just its denomination. So, a $2 bill will always have a face value of $2*.However, its collector value may be different - sometimes much different - depending on its age, rarity, and condition. Many 1976 $2 bills were saved as mementos of the Bicentennial, so any that are circulated have no extra collector value. But an uncirculated 1976 $2 bill that isn't folded or otherwise worn might have a collector value of $3 or so.By contrast, a 1909-S cent with the designer's initials on the back has a face value of one cent, but a collector value of about $1000.(*) And a $1 bill will have a face value of $1, etc.
Face value.
The face value of any integer in a base 10 number is equal to the number - in this case, 2. Remember to distinguish this between the place value, which, in this case, would be two tens, or 20.