The number that comes next in the series 1 2 2 5 3 10 is 7. You get this number by subtracting the number 3 from the number 10.
12
8
6
4
A star next to the serial number on any US bill means that the original note with that number was damaged in printing, and the star note is the replacement.
In the 1950s, there were several different series of 10 dollar bills issued by the treasury. The series range from A through E, and have different values depending upon the series. For a series A 10 dollar bill, the value online is between 45 and 100 dollars, depending upon condition.
Depends on which series and what condition it is in. A series 1957 could range from $1.25 to $10. A series 1899 would be $100 or more, possibly much more if in high condition.
somewhere between 10 and 5000000000 dollars
The US didn't print any $10 silver certificates in 1929, only National Currency notes. Please post a new question with the bill's seal color and whether there is a small letter next to the date. You don't need to provide the serial number, however.
10
11 comes next.
10
The next number in the series 10, -5, 25, -35, 85, -155 is:
This series is of the function f(x) = x2+1, starting with x=0.The next number in the series is 26. The number after that is 37.
10
11
10
24
its +2, +2, -1... so the next is 10
44
44