yeah
I was wondering the same thing and I found it depicted on a stamp from Barbados displayed on this page. http://bps.gov.bb/index.php?ZZZ=1_1055_10_0_0_&YYY=17_53
I was wondering the same thing. "Fenty" is a name that I definitely identify with Barbados.
No
The pound sterling and American dollars are the same thing. They equal the same amount no matter what. Say you have fourteen pounds, and fourteen dollars. They equal the same thing in England and America. So, technically seaking 1,300,000 pounds is 1,300,000 American dollars. One Biritish pound = 1.6434 American dollars officially.
same thing, ten bucks
nobody knows trying to find out the same thing.
The West Indies are a group of islands, most of which are separate independent countries. In most cases each island country has its own currency, there is no one currency. Not true there are 10 islands that use the same currency, the Eastern Caribbean Dollar. Barbados, Jamaica, Trinidad all have their own currency. Puerto Rico, USVI use US dollars. The BVI use US dollars and British Pounds.
us dollars are American dollars. "us" is united states...of America. so you are talking about the same thing.
Basically, you can use the same methods in Barbados as anywhere else in the world.
The same as people from anywhere else
I'm wondering the same thing.
The telephone country code for the United Kingdom is +44, and you must drop the trunk prefix 0 from the beginning of the UK domestic telephone number. For example, Reading's area code 0118 becomes +44 118. If you are calling on a mobile phone, just enter the number in international format, beginning with +44 (including the plus symbol). If you are calling on a landline phone, substitute the Barbadian/North American international access prefix 011 for the plus symbol. (Note: Barbados uses the prefix 011, the same as the USA and Canada. The prefix 00 will not work from Barbados.)