Oh, what a happy little question! If you have 1000 dollars and each bill is 5 dollars, you can simply divide 1000 by 5 to find the answer. That would give you 200 five dollar bills! Just imagine all the lovely things you could do with that many bills fluttering around like happy little butterflies.
1000 bills.
1000 of them.
100
They would be 1000*300 millimetres = 1000*300/1000 metres ie 300 metres.
Oh, what a happy little question! If you have 1000 dollars and each bill is 5 dollars, you can simply divide 1000 by 5 to find the answer. That would give you 200 five dollar bills! Just imagine all the lovely things you could do with that many bills fluttering around like happy little butterflies.
To make $1000 using $20 bills, you would need 50 bills. This is because $20 x 50 = $1000. Each $20 bill represents 1/20 of the total amount, so dividing $1000 by $20 gives you the number of bills needed.
1000 bills.
1000 of them.
how many times does 1000 dollars are in a million
100
1000
They would be 1000*300 millimetres = 1000*300/1000 metres ie 300 metres.
100
The last known count of existing $1000 US bills was 165,372, in May of 2009. These bills are not in circulation and are worth more than their face value to collectors.
1000 / 50 = 20
1000000/1000=1000