20 euro note
A lac is 100,000 I presume. A 100,000 euro note is brown in colour. This note is quite rare becuase the euro countries are withdrawing the usage of large notes.
No people are featured on any Euro banknotes, furthermore there is only one set of Euro note designs, so the French note is exactly the same as all other Euro notes.
Euro notes come in denominations of €500, 200, 100, 50, 20, 10, and 5.
It has this colour: because there are no €1000 notes. The highest denomination is €500.
The exchange rate value is about $7. You would have to return the note to an Italian bank for exchange into Euro. A 1984 issue 10,000 Lira note in mint uncirculated condition would be worth $20 to a collector. Older notes in mint condition are worth more.
To calculate the space that 2 billion euros in 50 euro notes would occupy, we first determine how many notes are involved. Dividing 2 billion by 50 gives us 40 million notes. A single 50 euro note has dimensions of approximately 160 mm x 82 mm x 0.1 mm. Stacking these notes would result in a total height of about 4,000 meters, while the area they occupy would be roughly 3.28 million square meters, equivalent to about 460 soccer fields.
No. The largest commercial note is for 500 Euros. Larger notes were not issued so as to make it more difficult to move large sums of money in cash rather than through the banking system - usually for illegal purposes.
No, the A is not the same as B sharp. B sharp would be the C note since there are no music notes between B and C. The C note would only be called a "B sharp" if C sharp is used in a key, since proper music note naming only allows for one note of each base name ("accidental" notes excluded). So rather than have two types of C notes, you would have a type of B note and a type of C note.
Yes, as the Euro is the legal tender in Spain and Germany. The notes are exactly the same in both countries. Only the coins look different, and that is only on one side. All Euro notes and coins can be used in all of the 18 Eurozone countries.
it equals a quarter note because 2 sixteenth notes equal an eight note so 4 sixteenth notes would equal a quarter note.
There is no 5000 euro note.
The highest value Euro note is €500.