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You do not give any detail to identify the notes. Presumably they are in mint or uncirculated condition. A group of sequentially numbered notes would have some value above that of the same number of non-sequentially numbered notes.
Discoveries in calculus were not numbered sequentially so it is not possible to determine which one was the twenty first.
Matter, or its phases, are not numbered sequentially, so it is not possible to answer the question.
The fact that they are sequentially numbered suggests that they are uncirculated and possibly in mint, or near mint condition. A wad of sequentially numbered banknotes would be of great interest to many banknote collectors. I suggest that you take your banknotes to a reputable coin dealer for inspection and a valuation.
bulleted or numbered lists.
bulleted or numbered lists. (apex)
"Source documents" are the original documents that were generated concerning some issue, rather than documents that are derived or transcribed from other documents. Source documents would be things like census forms, letters, or invoices, and not genealogies or histories compiled from other books, or spreadsheets.
An outline numbered list would have sub-sections, like 1.1 and 1.2 or 1(a) and 1(b) and so on. You would see it in very formal documents, like legal documents or reports. A standard numbered list just has whole numbers, so 1, 2, 3, 4 and so on, with no sub-sections.
A guide suggests a value of $350 NIB. Doubt if there would be much of a premium for a sequentially numbered pair. Having One Shot Fired, will make that one less than NIB condition, but as a fancy shooter, it would be worth almost as much.
sequentially means together in order
A document management workflow consists of the procedural steps to be followed sequentially to track and store documents. It is used to keep track of from when documents originated and for what division of a business, when it was revised by whom, and descriptive of modifications.
An outline numbered list would have sub-sections, like 1.1 and 1.2 or 1(a) and 1(b) and so on. You would see it in very formal documents, like legal documents or reports. A standard numbered list just has whole numbers, so 1, 2, 3, 4 and so on, with no sub-sections.