It may vary, go to forums such as cointalk or contact a museum or historical agency
to see if the error is uncommon, unfortunately there isn't much info on coupons
as opposed to coin and currency.
The original expression refers to paper money, which some considered "not worth the paper it was printed on." Whatever is being written on the paper (your idea) is so pointless/bad/stupid/wrong that it is not worth the two cents that went into buying the paper. i.e. Your idea was so bad it wasn't even worth the extremely small amount of money that it cost to buy the paper.
Certainly yes, for any kind of spelling or any detail written wrong a whitener can be used on a stamp paper.
About .20cents.
A 2001 20 dollar bill that has been printed wrong would be worth 40-50$
You edit a paper when you get something wrong.
holograms on the wrong side.. worth $$$Yes there was a miss print as i am aware. Approximately 46 new twenty dollar bills were printed with the strip holograms on the wrong side. Instead of the bills being printed with the strips on the left side of the queens face they were printed with the strip in between the 2 and the 0 in the number twent on the same face of the the bill but on the right side. These bills are worth an unimaginable amount of money adn if you were to sell they may sell for up to $250000 - $500000 Canadian currency. If they were to be kept for collection they may be worth millions some day.
If I am not wrong he is Frances Chichester, he appears in British stamp 24th July, 1967.
that paper is from ww1 not ww2 Who ever gave you that information is WRONG!! The Stars and Stripes also was a paper during WWII and is still being printed today for our service men and women. I have an original S&S from D-day.
To murder the king, of course. The idea came to him at once when the witches hailed him as king, but he did his best to stamp it down, knowing that it was wrong and that it wasn't worth it.
Jefferson nickels are quite common and generally have no special value beyond their five cents face value. The exception would be if you found a coin that was printed wrong at the mint or otherwise was very rare and in good condition. in which case it might be worth more.
US bills are printed in multiple passes, and sometimes a pass is accidentally missed so the parts of the image put on by that step are missing; there's also the possibility that they were printed but on the wrong side of the bill. Your best approach would be to have the bill evaluated by a dealer or appraiser who's familiar with error currency. In any case, without seeing it, a ballpark estimate for a missing seal could range anywhere from $200 to $500 depending on the specific cause of the error.
Yes, the sentence 'What paper did you have?' is correct. There is nothing wrong with it.