I think they are about the same size.
MoreRegardless of denomination, all current US paper bills are the same size (155.96 mm x 66.29 mm) and weight (1 gram).In many other countries, each bill is a different size as an anti-counterfeiting measure. Higher-denomination bills are larger which prevents counterfeiters from bleaching a low-value bill and reprinting it with a higher denomination. The US instead adds special hidden security strips to each denomination. The strips for each denomination are in different places and glow different colors under UV light.
Less than a buck.
The Canadian dollar is, on average, although it fluctuates, worth one cent less than the American Dollar. So 2.00CD is 1.98USD
Not in the US. Some countries such as Zimbabwe that have their own money called dollars have issued notes of that size, but only because their dollars are worth much less than US dollars.
If you mean size, all notes printed before series 1928 were large sized. If you mean larger denomination, there were $500, 1000, 5000, 10,000, and 100,000 notes printed. Notes having a denomination of larger than $100 has not been printed since 1945.
...Nothing. There is and was no US one million dollar bill in circulation. It is a privately made novelty item that isn't worth more than the money used to print it.
No, because the paper is the same size on the front and the back.
No. All U.S. bills have been the same size since 1928. You may have a replica or something that was cut down from a normal bill.
The 5 cent coin is smaller in diameter than the Two Dollar coin. The Australian 5 cent coin is 19.41 mm in diameter. The Australian Two Dollar coin is 20.62 mm in diameter.
Smaller, think of it in terms of money-are dimes bigger than a dollar bill. It takes 10 10's to make 100. (or 1 dollar)
No.
The average size of an adult human's kidneys are about 11cm long and about 6cm wide.
smaller
If your bill is smaller than a regular-size US banknote, it's a novelty item and not a real bill. Since 1928 all US bills have been the same size, 156 x 66 mm). Officially, the Treasury considers all current US bills to be "small size" to distinguish them from notes issued up till the early 1920s. Those bills are called "large size" and were 189 × 79 mm
about how many times heavier is a penny than a dollar bill in ounces
28AA is smaller than a 28A
It's not illegal if the print is less than 75% or more than 150% the size of a genuine note.
Smaller