No. All you'll get is a pile of ashes that used to be a $1 bill.
If you think about it for, oh, a second or two, if such a bizarre story were actually true, wouldn't people all over the country be doing it, and in any case how could anyone outside of Harry Potter create magic money?
It doesn't. A dollar bill has a mass of 1 gram. A modern US quarter has a mass of 5.67 grams.
about two and eight tenths times (AKA 2.8, if you didn't know)
One-dollar-bill: 155.956 millimeters × 66.294 millimeters.
Although we can see red-it is not what is actually there-we reinterrupt a series of greys as red. It turns out we can distinguish natural light much better because we 'colour code' it. The grey we interrupt as red. It is a frequency of light, rather than an actual speed, from 630-740 nanometres.
Orange has a longer wavelength than yellow. On the spectrum of visible light red is longest and violet is shortest.
No.
about how many times heavier is a penny than a dollar bill in ounces
Aside from the one dollar coin, other coins have a face value of less than one dollar. In the past, there were larger value coins, but they haven't been used since the 1930s.
less than the American dollar bill.
If you mean a ten dollar bill ripped in half than absolutely nothing. No place would accept it.
yes, because if you take a Neodymium magnet and place it on the edge of a dollar bill than the magnet lifts the iron up.
Jackson has been on the 20-dollar bill all of my lifetime and I am getting old. The $20 dollar bill buys less than a $5 bill bought when I was a boy, but I would still say they are valuable.
It doesn't. A dollar bill has a mass of 1 gram. A modern US quarter has a mass of 5.67 grams.
Gayer than a four dollar bill!
No.
Less than a buck.
No.