Hey it has the money gram/ money orders with a red circle thingy at the top at the bottom it has ur name also the purchaser. Now on the left it has the date they for it the reference % I think than it displays holograms
The obvious answer is that Piggy Banks are saving boxes that are shaped to look like a Pig, they have a slot on the top in order for you to put your money into, plus a removable plug underneath for you to gain access to your money.
A money order comes with 2 parts. The top part you send to the company/person that you are sending the money. The second part is your receipt and you should be able to take that to the place where you bought the money order and get a new one. Look at the fine print on your receipt to see what the process is for a lost/stolen money order.
Your first glance will tell you a lot about the money order. Look for print that is shifted off to the right or the left of where it should be. Print that doesn't line up should be your first give-away. Your next point to check is the reddish/pink spot in the bottom center of the money order, just above the MICR line. This is a temperature sensitive ink that will change color to white (color design disappears). While my hands are warm enough to change them in a second or two, some persons may take a few seconds. If the color refuses to change, it is certainly a fake. Counterfeit Money Grams will rarely be printed on professional printing equipment, but some are. When you are looking at the MICR line (the odd-shaped numbers and symbols across the bottom of a money order or check), the numbers should be crisp, not fuzzy along the edges. If the numbers are fuzzy, the money order was printed on an ink-jet and is not valid. The hardest fake ones to detect are the ones that are printed on stolen Money Gram paper. While rare, they are out there. These will have the microprint and color changing ink as the real ones should, as it is the real paper. And, if the person that created it uses a laser printer, it may not have fuzzy numbers. Easy enough - contact Money Gram and verify the money order. Working in a bank, I have seen some really good fakes. But, I have yet to see one that couldn't be figured out before the call for verification.
There are a lot of places to look for information on hard money lenders and funding options. Some of the websites to look at companies like Moolahlist and Foreclosure University.
It looks like the Euro, Italy is part of the EU (European Union) and they all use the same currency
A gram is a measure of mass - it does not "look" like anything.
Look at them under a microscope! If they are cocci, they will look like balls. If they are rods, they will look like...rods!
Gram is a solid measurement. Air is not solid.
A money order has certain information that needs to be filled out. The money order has a square shape like a check, but there are areas that require filling out, such as signature of the person sending the money order called a purchaser, the name of the person or company that it is being sent to or payee, and the address of the person sending it. The amount of the money order will also be on it.
One one-thousandth of a gram looks like mg, or milligram.
It doesn't look like anything...you can't see it.
A quarter gram of a 1 gram
0.5 g
Clostridium tetani look very clean, large, and dark colored on a gram stain. They look like this because of the way the light from the sun hits them when on a gram stain.
I am not sure what one gram looks like but if you put a few hundred together you end up with a Big Mac from McDonald's.
regular money
use Google, and look up- Vanuatu Money