"In God We Trust"
In Barbados, the coin currency is comprised of the Barbadian dollar coin. The rest of the currency is all paper.
Chinese renminbi consists of both paper and coin currency. The coins feature pandas and the paper money features dragons. Paper currency has the denomination written in both English and Chinese lettering.
This note is legal tender and is used for all debts public and private
In god we trust and e pluribus unim
In god we trust and e pluribus unim
Coin collectors take currency out of circulation all the time. It's perfectly legal to do.
No. Some use currency from another country.
The coin with the inscription "DGREGFD1978" does not correspond to any known country or currency. It is likely not a legitimate coin.
They are not all presidents, e.g. Franklin, Chase.
There really is no difference in the terms of money and currency. Currency usually means a form of payment now, when it used to mean paper money. Money means cash and coin as a form of payment. Both terms can also mean credit cards, debit cards, money orders, and all other forms of payment. Checks are still used, but less frequently.
The basics of US money1 cent coin also called a 'penny'1 nickel coin = 5 cents1 dime coin = 10 cents1 quarter (quarter of a dollar) coin = 25 cents1 half dollar = 50 cents1 dollar coin or paper currency = $1.00 = 100 centsThe rest are all paper currency:$2 bill$5 bill$10 bill$20 bill$50 bill$100 billThat's it for US money that is currently being minted/printed.There are still some $500 and $1000 bills around, but are mostly in the hands of collectors. Larger bills are rare, and found in collections for the most part. All are still recognized as legal tender (with the exception of the lowly cent - you cannot force anyone to take pennies in payment, but everyone does in small amounts.)
"BEP" stands for "Bureau of Engraving and Printing", the agency that prints all US currency.