are you talking about on a dollar bill itself? im not sureLOL im sorry but i really dont know....hey here's an idea, look it up on the internet! Wow! i know im a genius!are you talking about on a dollar bill itself? im not sureLOL im sorry but i really dont know....hey here's an idea, look it up on the internet! Wow! i know im a genius!
There are no officially recognized million-dollar bills featuring Marilyn Monroe. The concept of such bills is typically associated with novelty items or artistic interpretations, not legal currency. The U.S. Treasury does not issue currency in denominations higher than $100, making any million-dollar bills purely fictional or collectible items rather than legitimate currency.
Put together one thousand dollars. Now do it 999 more times (without re-using any of it). You will end up with one million dollars presuming you don't spend any while you are busy gathering. If you wanted to know how many dollars you would get for one million of some other nation's currency, you have to include the other currency.
Any 1 million US Dollar note is worthless other than as a curiosity. The largest denomination is circulation is $100. The largest ever circulated is $100,000.
A dollar is a currency of a large number of countries: in most cases the value differing from one country to another. You have not specified which country. In any case, one million (by itself) is a pure number which has no monetary value.
I doubt it. BTW 50 lakhs is 5 million if anyone was wondering.
It's worth about half a cent for the paper. The U.S. has NEVER printed a one million dollar bill, so any you find is only a novelty, NOT legal currency.
As the earlier answer pointed out, in Taiwan. However, you can also go to any nearby currency exchange store and they will most likely be able to exchange any of your currency for the New Taiwan Dollar!
No, all (US) million dollar bills are novelties and are not currency. The highest denomination of US currency ever printed was the $100,000 note which was only used in transactions between banks and none ever circulated among the general public. The $100,000 note featured Woodrow Wilson on it.
$1,000 dollar bill
A Michael Jackson million dollar bill is a novelty item and not a legal currency, so its value is primarily sentimental or collectible rather than monetary. Depending on its condition and market demand, it can be worth anywhere from a few dollars to several hundred dollars among collectors. However, it does not hold any official value like real currency.
Converting dollars to hundredweight
Very little. Dollars, as with any currency, are inanimate and lack conciousness.