No. The U.S. has never printed a $1 million dollar bill. What you have is a novelty, and it's not worth anything.
1. Must be 18 years old2. Must be a U.S. citizen3. Make at least $1000 a month4. A legal resident5. Show valid Social Security #6. Have a valid checking accountIf you meet the six requirements above, you can get 300 dollars in less than one hour.http://www.100dayloanscash.info
50.00 British pounds sterling = 83.19 US dollarsExchange rate: 1.663894 Rate valid as of: 5/12/2009
1,000,000.00 British pounds sterling = 1,655,903.30 US dollars Exchange rate: 1.655903 Rate valid as of: 6/12/2009
Use the site indicated in the related link below for this sort of conversion because the exchange rate is different each day. -------------------------------------- 37.99 British pounds sterling = 60.63 US dollars Exchange rate: 1.595914 Rate valid as of: 26/6/2011 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On 10th July 2017 160 US $ = 124.14 British £. Note this answer is only valid as of this date as the vale of currencies fluctuate against one another on a daily basis.
It is illegal to own a bird of prey without a rehabilitator license or a valid raptor permit.
If you mean the series number, there were several valid series of US dollar bills in that time frame. Specifically:Series 1999Series 2001Series 2003Series 2003ASeries 2006There were also Series 2004, 2004A, and 2006A, but those were only issued in some denominations ($20 and $50 notes for 2004; $10, $20, and $50 notes for 2004A; $100 notes for 2006A). There was also a Series 2009, but I'm not sure that those were actually released IN 2009.
It's six billion, five hundred million.
Yes, in some cases. The Cray Institute of Mathematics has issued a reward of a million dollars to anybody who correctly answers (with a valid proof) any one of seven outstanding math problems.
5.00 US dollars = 3.85 EurosExchange rate: 0.770278Rate valid as of: 15/1/2011
Only for travel and tourist agencies; but unofficialy any person is happy to be payed in dollars (valid banknotes !).
No, though it did exist at one time.
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They are still valid as 20 cents worth of postage. You would have to add additional stamps to the envelope to meet the correct rate.
The 2004 date is a series date, which is used for as long as that series is valid. It's not like a coin that gets a new date every year. For example, Series 1976 $2 bills were issued until the mid 1990's, when the Series 1995 notes began. So, no your series 2004 notes don't have any added value.
Yes. It is valid; you can pay in dollars in most places. 1 US Dollar is around 2.6 Soles right now, changes a bit everyday.
An amount in euros of 49.50 equals 61.513 in U.S.A. dollars. But exchange rates move up and down, so this quote is valid as of November 24, 2014.