There is no such thing as the German dollar. The currency in German is the Euro (symbol '€').
The smallest denomination Euro note is €5. Followed by €10, €20, €50, €100, €200 and €500. All these are different sizes.
Area = Length*Width so Width = Area/Length = 100.75/15.5 = 6.5 units.
The width of a one dollar bill is approximately 6.14 cm.
length in dollar bill in pixels
There is no 1,000 dollar German bill
No matter what the length or width, a dollar just never stretches far enough any more. Anyway, the length and width of the dollar bill and the diameter and thickness of the dollar coin have varied over time and across nations. (The dollar does not originate in America!) The United States dollar is presently about 6.13 inches long, and about 2.61 inches high. You'll find more precise figures floathing around, but that precision is really spurious. Dollar bills aren't made exactly the same size, and don't stay the size they were made, as they are crumpled and splashed. (Put a dollar bill in liquid ammonia for a while; it will discernibly shrink.)
2.625 Inch
There is no such thing as the German dollar. The currency in German is the Euro (symbol '€').
Length is 6.14 inches
There is no such thing as the German dollar. The currency in German is the Euro (symbol '€'). The largest Euro banknote is €500.
The size of the 1820 United States dollar bill was approximately seven inches by 3 inches. The dollar bill is smaller in 2014.
A U.S. dollar bill measures 6.14 inches (156 millimeters) in length. This standard size applies to all denominations of U.S. paper currency.
The size of the 1820 United States dollar bill was approximately seven inches by 3 inches. The dollar bill is smaller in 2014.