Yes you can. You would actually save money by going out and buying a current book of stamps, but the post office will take it if you put two 39 cent stamps on there.
- While it will be accepted for postage, actually valued at $0.78, it represents an overpayment, which raises suspicion.
4 cents. Put it on your next letter.
42 cents. But if you don't want to buy a 42 cent stamp then go ahead and put 42 1 cent stamps on there.
More than likely, the post office will stamp "Insufficient Postage" on it and return it to you. Not only will you lose out on your 39-cent stamp, but you will also lose the time of delivery. It would be better to buy a 2-cent stamp and add it to the envelope than to lose 39 cents and delivery time.
The very first US stamp pictures Washington. It was a 5 cent black stamp. Benjamin Franklin was pictured on the 10 cent stamp.
If they are Australian coins, they are all still legal tender. You can take them to a shop and buy something worth 45 cents, or put a deposit on something worth more than 45 cents. You could put it in a money box or give it to a charity.
Put a 42 cent stamp on it. - Stuart
One 42 cent stamp is sufficient for postage up to 1 ounce. The second ounce of weight only costs 17 cents, not another 42 cents.
Exactly 1!
Yes, but you have to determine when the stamp was issued and therefore the denomination. If the stamp was determined to be a $0.39 cent stamp, you would have to put on on additional $0.03 cents for the current $0.42 rate. Only the liberty bell "forever stamps" are non-denominational and therefore good even if the USPS increases their rates.
The cent sign is put after the number, as opposed to the dollar sign, which is put before the number.
The first Lincoln cents were put into circulation on August 2, 1909.
a regular 44 cent stamp is all u need!