454 with 24 cents left over.
Postage is 98 cents for a standard letter from the US. You can buy a 98-cent stamps or use any combination that totals 98 cent or more. For example two forever stamps plus a 10-cent stamp. If all you have is forever stamps, you would have to use three of them.
If they say 42 cents on them, you need the additional 2 cent stamps to make up the difference. If they are 'Forever' stamps, they are valid for one ounce of First Class Postage regardless of the cost.
Three 44- cent or forever stamps will work, but the postage is only 98 cents- you would wasting 34 cents. You can buy 98-cents stamps or 10-cent stamps at the PO.
No, but you could buy some 5 cent stamps and make the current 44 cent rate.
The USPS no longer prints 20-cent stamps. They do print 10-cent and 5-cent stamps.
Stamps are always and forever worth the denomination printed on the stamp. If you need a one-cent stamp to complete postage, and you have a one-cent stamp from 1933 - it is perfectly legal. As to what individual stamps are worth to stamp collectors - that is a completely different question.
Yes the post office sells 10 cent stamps. Stamps are available in a wide variety of denominations and not all offices will have a full selection. You can mix and match as necessary, so if they don't have 10 cent stamps, you could buy two 5 cent stamps.
20% of 20000 = 20000*20/100 = 4000
One, plus a 21-cent extra-ounce stamp.
In the US you can buy two 10- cent stamps, four 5-cent stamps. five 4-cent stamps, ten 2-cent stamps or twenty 1-cent stamps for 20 cents at most post office windows.
Yes - Three 44- cent or forever stamps will work, but the postage is only 98 cents- you would wasting 34 cents. You can buy 98-cents stamps or 10-cent stamps at the PO. (44 + 44 + 10 = 98)
You can purchase 1 cent or 2 cent stamps.