The current British Fifty Pound notes are mostly red no matter which country they are in.
Yellow.
Yellow.
yelow
Slang for a British £50 note:- 50 quid 50 nicker a nifty a bullseye half a tonne
A 50-pound banknote weighs one gram.
sir Benjamin poolon invented the cash note because when he was 4 , he started being intreseted in old coins and money. Then in 1236 when he was 14 he created the 50 pound note that then was closley followed by the 20 pound note the 5 pound note and the ten pound note.
Currently, British general circulation currency comes in the following denominations - 1 Penny coin 2 Pence coin 5 Pence coin 10 Pence coin 20 Pence coin 50 Pence coin 1 Pound coin 2 Pound coin 5 Pound note 10 Pound note 20 Pound note 50 Pound note
The largest demotion banknote for the British pound is the £50 note.
A pound note typically weighs about 1 gram, so 200,000 pound notes would weigh about 200 kilograms. A 50 pound note weighs roughly 1 gram, so 50 notes would weigh about 50 grams.
You can buy yourself a special marker pen that you stripe across the note, and if it turns a particular colour - it's fake.If you take it to a bank and it's fake - they will KEEP the note, but will NOT give you anything in return except a receipt to say the note has been confiscated!
Because he is the inventor of the steam engine.
There are several ways one may refer to a 50 note, such as 'Reddies'. 'Niftys' or 'Bullseye', for example is Cockney rhyming slang for a fifty pound note.