In the US, you can use it toward meeting the required amount of postage, which is going to mean using two of them toward the 44 cents.
It is also possible that it can be used in some bulk mail, as there are fractional values associated with some of those mailings.
I have recently received a letter with four stamps which were something-and-a-half-penny stamps on. Providing the total adds up to the local postage rate, I don't see why not.
no
The 50 Pence coin is still in use. It is equal to half a pound (GBP).
No. Blue chip stamps are no longer redeemable.
Half crowns, florins, pounds, shillings, and pence. A pound consisted of 20 shillings, and a shilling consisted of 12 pence. A half crown was 2 shillings and 6 pence. A florin was 2 shillings. They had "notes". These notes were to England as dollars were to the US.
You can still use 37-cent stamps, however you must add sufficient postage for the current price.
Most current Hungarian stamps say Magyar Posta or Magyarorszag but some stamps do not have the word Magyar.
Yes. Postage stamps never expire. You just have to use enough to equal the rate for the item you are sending. The exception to this is Forever Stamps. They always maintain the current rate.
Yes you can and they are worth 33 cents as postage.
No they don't expire the only exception is the old pound, shilling and pence (£sd) values which have no postal validity now. You can use decimal currency stamps of any age as long as the postage is correct for the class of mail you used.
The Pilgrims used a variety of currencies for trade, including English coins such as shillings, pence, and pounds. They also conducted barter trade with Native Americans before creating their own form of currency known as the New England shilling.
All Newfoundland stamps are valid for postal use at their face value because they have not been demonetized (their use denied) by Canada.
Can I use food stamps
Postage stamps that are worth 32 cents can still be used but they must be combined with other stamps to meet the current postage rate. In January of 2014 the current postage rate was 49 cents for a letter that weighs one once of less.