Well lets look at this sensibly - and one assume you mean 10,000 USD (US dollars) and NOT ZAR (South African Rand)
10,000 / 20 = 500.
10000 / 20 = 500 You'd need 500 $20 bills to make $10,000.
10000 of them.
1 million dollars/100 dollars = 10000 bills
There are 10 ten-cent coins in one dollar. This is because each ten-cent coin represents 0.10 of a dollar, and 10 of these coins would equal 1 dollar. Therefore, you would need 10 ten-cent coins to make 1 dollar.
4.3 inches, most heist movies make it seem like it would fill up a briefcase and such but it doesn't. In 20 dollar bills it is 21.5 inches, in 10 dollar bills it is 43 inches, in 5 dollar bills it is 86 inches, and in 1 dollar bills it is 430 inches. A dollar bill is .0043 inches so in turn to make a stack a mile long it would takeover 14 million bills.
It takes 10 dimes to make one dollar. Divide 10000 by ten and you get 1000 dollars. $1,000.00
To find out how many $20 bills are needed to make $16,000, you would divide $16,000 by $20. This calculation gives you 800. Therefore, it takes 800 twenty-dollar bills to make $16,000.
10000 / 20 = 500 You'd need 500 $20 bills to make $10,000.
it takes 10000 caterires to make a train
10000 of them.
Smaller, think of it in terms of money-are dimes bigger than a dollar bill. It takes 10 10's to make 100. (or 1 dollar)
There are ten dimes, it takes two Nicole's to make a dime, two time ten is twenty. There are twenty Nicole's in a dollar.There are, however, no Nicole's in a dollar bill.
A standard US dollar bill is approximately 0.0043 inches thick. Therefore, it takes about 233 dollar bills stacked together to make a height of 1 inch. This calculation is based on dividing 1 inch by the thickness of a single bill.
save it, in a few years it will grow value
you use one ten dollar bill, one five dollar bill, and one one dollar bill.
They used to, but not anymore. The notes were last printed in 1945 and the Federal Reserve began actively taking them out of circulation in 1969. Because of this, any high denomination bill (any bill over $100) is worth quite a bit more than face value to a collector.
Draw a little '0' next to the ones.