US currency is printed 32 bills to a sheet (4 by 8).
About 26 wide by 22 high
(1,000,000,000 pesos)/(1,000 pesos per bill) = 1,000,000 bills (one million bills)
1000 bills.
There are 50 one dollar bills to a strap.
No one keeps statistics on how many bills of a particular denomination are in circulation, only of the number that are printed and distributed through the Federal Reserve System. Bills can leave circulation due to being damaged or lost, or squirreled away in drawers. That's particularly true with $2 bills because of all of the misinformation that exists regarding them. (e.g. they've been withdrawn, they're only valid in certain places, etc., none of which is even remotely true) There is a low but constant demand for $2s. The last run was made with the 2003 series date, and there are expectations a 2008 or 2009 series will be printed as well.
The first federally issued $1 bills were printed in 1862. However before that many private banks printed $1 bills, and bills with that denomination were also printed by many jurisdictions during the colonial period.
According to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 45% of all U.S. currency printed are one-dollar bills.
Bills are printed. Coins are minted. All U.S. bills are printed at two facilities of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, one in Washington DC and the other in Fort Worth. Bills from Fort Worth are identifiable by a small "FW" in one or more corners.
Many of these bills have been cut as described on purpose to perform illusions. These bills were cut from uncut sheets purchased from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
All US bills are printed at facilities in Washington DC and Fort Worth. Bills from the Fort Worth plant have a tiny "FW" next to one of the plate numbers. Many people are confused by older bills that have a city name in the Federal Reserve District seal. That's the location of the Federal Reserve Bank that ordered and distributed the bill, not where it was printed.
On an 8 1/2 x 11 inch sheet of paper, about 5 dollar bills would fit.
Yes you can. There is an Entire Workbook option when printing. There is also an Active Sheet(s) option, so if you have more than one active sheet, they can be printed.
$7.17
32 dollars
You have what's called a flipover error. Depending on its condition it might retail for $300 to $500. Flipover errors are possible because bills are printed in multiple steps. If the sheet of paper on which a set of bills is printed is accidentally put in the press incorrectly, one or more parts of the design can be upside down or backwards.
There are currently 2 facilities where US bills are printed. The original facility is in Washington and a secondary plant is in Fort Worth. All denominations, not just $1 bills, are printed at each facility. The Fort Worth plant opened in December 1990. Bills printed there can be identified by a tiny "FW" next to the plate number in one corner of the design, for example FWC36
$50.00