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The Bank of England is the central agency for the production of British banknotes. Bank of England banknotes are the only legal tender notes that are accepted in England and Wales. By mutual agreement between the banks, the banknotes of Scotland and Northern Ireland are treated as legal tender in England and Wales although they do not have the status of legal tender.
Good only for a banknotes collection.
No. The One Pound note ceased to be legal tender in March 1988.
no
Yes. Davies is an accptable Scrabble word.
These older type of Ruble banknotes no longer have a legal tender value. The Bank of Russia no longer exchanges these banknotes for a monetary value. At Leftover Currency we continue to exchange old Russian Ruble banknotes at an exchange rate that covers their collectable value.
To remove the cabbage makes sense. -In various slangs 'cabbage' means a large bomb (RAF ), stolen banknotes, forged banknotes, or the brain of a stroke victim.
Irish banknotes are not legal tender in Great Britain. Northern Irish banknotes are not legal tender in England and Wales, but by mutual agreement between the banks, are considered as "acceptable tender".
Yes, all notes issued by the European Central Bank are still legal tender.
Northern Ireland and Scottish banknotes are issued by commercial banks rather than a central banking authority and therefore have the status of a promissory note rather than legal tender. By agreement between the banks of the United Kingdom, all banknotes are treated as legal tender. However, shopkeepers and other business people are not obliged to accept Northern Ireland and Scottish banknotes.
3" is fine. That is the ADA width for restrooms.
No, Scottish banknotes never were legal tender, and Scotland is the only place where they will be accepted. The currency of Scotland is the Pound Sterling (GBP). All Scottish banks have the right to produce their own banknotes, but only three do. Strangely, all Scottish banknotes are not legal tender anywhere including Scotland. They have more of the standing of a promissory note (in Scotland) and there is a strange legal loop hole in Scottish law that allows this to occur, fortunately. This is simply wrong. Scottish and Northern Ireland banknotes should be accepted within the UK but if accepted outside Scotland, they are returned by UK banks to Scotland. The fact that many have the word "sterling" on them is the biggest clue here. I have frequently spent Scottish currency in England.