If you have both parts of the note, it is still considered to be legal tender, although the retailer might refuse the note.
If a significant portion of the note is missing, you can make a claim on the Bank of England.
See the related link below for more detailed information.
5.00 - 4.20 = 0.80 pounds.
If you have spent £1.25 of your £5.00, you have spent one-quarter (¼), or 25% of it. What remains is three-quarters (¾) or 75% of the original, totaling £3.75.
No. The Bank of England One Pound note ceased to be legal tender in 1988.On the bright side, the Bank of England website advises -"Genuine Bank of England notes that have been withdrawn from circulation retain their face value for all time and can be exchanged at the Bank of England in London. There is no fee for this service."
I believe that no one paid twenty bucks just to spend on you. So just spend twenty dollars yourself.
she gets 40 million pound a week
Take it to a shop and buy something.
Not a single pound.
Lots of electronics!
roughly 500 days.
2.34 billion pound in 2012
very long
There is probably a law against urinating on, or otherwise contaminating or befouling British currency, but as long as it is intact and is readily identifiable as a Ten Pound, you should be able to spend it.