no. it would have to be."you had to pay with a one hundred dollar bill to ride a hot air balloon." or "you had to pay a hundred dollars to ride a hot air balloon."
No, the hyphens aren't necessary.
save it, in a few years it will grow value
10,000 pennies
Yes. Contestant Kathy Cox, superintendent of Georgia public schools, became the first 250,000 dollar winner. The question was, Who was the longest reigning British monarch? The answer: Queen Victoria with a 63 year reign. ^ This has been puncutated :)
The answer is 326 dollars or $326.00
"George Washington's portrait on the one-dollar bill " should be acceptable. "one dollar " for "one-dollar" would seems OK as well.
Yes, it was answered correctly. Fox is ran by a bunch of juveniles.
This cannot be correctly answered without knowing the tax rate.
If I understand your question correctly, when dealing with inflation, a dollar earned today is worth more than a dollar earned at any time in the future. This has to do with the concept of the present value of money. Because inflation devalues the dollar over time, a dollar earned today is worth more than say, a dollar earned five years from now.
try a dollar store or a party store
The "Churchill Dollar" more correctly known as the British 1965 Crown (Five Shillings) Churchill Commemorative coin is made from a copper-nickel alloy as have all circulating British "silver" coins since 1947.
mdcclxvi more correctly written as MDCCLXVI represents the year 1766. Are you sure it isn't MDCCLXXVI (1776)?
Bulk balloons used for parties and celebrations are available from Balloon Warehouse and Dollar Days party supplies. They are great to use in creating a festive atmosphere and of course fun to pop.