A Two rupees note bears a signature of Governor
Two hundred thousand Rupees.
Oh, what a lovely question! Let's paint a happy little conversion here. Two million euros is equal to approximately 170 million Indian rupees. Isn't that just wonderful to see how currencies can dance together on our canvas of numbers?
twenty two million, three hundred twenty five thousand rupees
To convert 5,000,000 dinars to Indian rupees, you need the current exchange rate between the two currencies. As of October 2023, if we assume 1 dinar equals approximately 240 Indian rupees, then 5,000,000 dinars would be roughly 1,200,000,000 Indian rupees. Please check the latest exchange rates for the most accurate conversion.
No, signatures typically have only two; the first and last.
governor
on a hundred rupee note you can find the governor's signature, the year when the note has been printed, the image of Gandhi,the RBI paper and 'hundred rupee' is written in fifteen languages on the back side and in two languages on the front, English and Hindi
two
Two hundred twenty eight thousand (XXX) rupees, where XXX specifies the country whose rupees the question refers to. Alternatively, you could write it as two lakh eight thousand (XXX) rupees.
The decimal value of the half note would depend on two things in the time signature: 1. The value of a whole note, denoted by the bottom number in the signature. 2. The number of beats, denoted by the top number in the signature. Let n be the value of a half-note as the length of a measure. Then n = (bottom number/2)/top number
. One beat. [[... Not quite. That is only true if the time signature has a 4 in the lower half. This means the beat is a quarter note. If your signature is 7/8 (for example) this means that there are 7 beats per measure and the eighth note gets the beat. In a given time signature and tempo, it would take the same amount of time to play two eighth notes as it would to play one quarter note.]]
two million rupees.
...is a half note when, in the time signature, the quarter note = 1 beat (any time signature/4). In any time/8, it would be a quarter note. Etc, etc...
It depends on the time signature. If the time signature is x/4, the the whole note gets 4 beats. It also depends on where the dot is. If the dot is above the whole note, it gets two beats; if it is to the right of the whole note it gets six beats.
It means there are two beats per measure, and each beat is one half-note.
The main difference is the denomination value printed on the note - one rupee note has a value of one rupee whereas a ten rupee note has a value of ten rupees. Additionally, the design, size, and color of the notes are also different to help easily differentiate between the two denominations.
Two hundred thousand Rupees.