For an approximate count - US bills weigh almost exactly one gram, so the stack's weight in grams should be close to the actual number of bills.
For a more accurate count - take the bills to your nearest bank - and ask the teller feed the money through one of their counting machines. If it's a branch of your own bank - they shouldn't charge you for the service.
Well, honey, if you can't do basic math, I'm not sure how you made it this far in life. Seven twenty dollar bills will make 140 dollars. So, count out those bills and stop bothering me with your simple arithmetic questions.
depends on the denomination of the dollar, a penny will take alot longer then 100 bills, also depends if you can count past 10
Because they don't do random numbers like that they count by 5's or 10's
Two dollars. Just tell your bank cashier you want some new bills and if she has a new bundle, she'll count out up to 100 bills in sequential order.
Well, honey, if you can do basic math, it's pretty clear that you need 80 twenty dollar bills to make 1600 dollars. So, go on and count those bills while I sit back and sip my tea.
Count how many you have. That's how much they're worth.
Oh, dude, seriously? Okay, so there are 20 $50 bills in $1,000, right? So, in $1 million, you just add six zeros to that, which means there are 20,000 $50 bills in a million bucks. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy!
Well, honey, if you can't do basic math, I'm not sure how you made it this far in life. Seven twenty dollar bills will make 140 dollars. So, count out those bills and stop bothering me with your simple arithmetic questions.
depends on the denomination of the dollar, a penny will take alot longer then 100 bills, also depends if you can count past 10
Because they don't do random numbers like that they count by 5's or 10's
1 billion seconds 1 dollar per second, 1 billion dollar bills.
For it to count as a dollar, you need a full one dollar bill or the equivalent in coins, which is 100 cents. Any amount less than this does not constitute a dollar, regardless of how close it may be. In other contexts, such as digital transactions, the equivalent value must also meet the one-dollar threshold.
Two dollars. Just tell your bank cashier you want some new bills and if she has a new bundle, she'll count out up to 100 bills in sequential order.
There are 1 million one-dollar bills in 1 million dollars. This is because each bill represents one unit of currency, and when you have 1 million units of currency, you have 1 million bills. Therefore, the number of one-dollar bills in 1 million dollars is simply 1 million.
To make 800 dollars using 20 dollar bills, you would need 40 bills. This can be calculated by dividing the total amount (800) by the value of each bill (20). The formula would be 800 / 20 = 40. Therefore, it takes 40 twenty dollar bills to make 800 dollars.
Well, honey, if you can do basic math, it's pretty clear that you need 80 twenty dollar bills to make 1600 dollars. So, go on and count those bills while I sit back and sip my tea.
Well, honey, if you're talking about cold hard cash, then you'll need 15 twenty dollar bills to make 300 bucks. It's simple math, darling. Just count 'em up and make it rain!