Very unlikely. You may be thinking of the fact that there were two different designs issued under the same 2006 series. The Federal Reserve originally planned to keep issuing the old green-and-black design, but changed its plans and decided to add anti-counterfeiting features. The old bills continued to be printed while the new purple-and-black design was prepared, so both designs were issued under the same series.
Neither design is rare, and both are only worth $5 despite a lot of internet rumors.
There are no official miscolored 2006 US 5 dollar bills. Miscolored or error notes can occasionally be found, but they are rare and usually considered collector's items.
no
Yes
Detonated means exploded like a bomb. Dollar bills don't explode.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of dollar bills.Collective nouns are an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun; for example, a roll of dollar bills, a wad of dollar bills, a bundle of dollar bills, etc.
The U.S. did not print any $2 bills with that date.
there are 100 bills in any bank bundle and 1000 in a brick
There are no U.S. ten dollar bills with that date. In any case bills dated 1963 and later are mostly only worth face value.
It's in the same place, to the left of Franklin's portrait, on all $100 bills issued since 1990. Earlier bills don't have any type of security strip. In bills dated 1990-2006, the strip glows red under UV light. In 2009 and later bills, the color is pink.
The United States two dollar bill are rare pieces of money that are not printed any more. You can cash in the value of these bills at most American banks.
The U.S. did not print any $1 bills with that date In fact, the U.S. didn't print any bills at all that are dated 1960.
Yes, Singapore uses them.
No major country prints $15 bills.