If the bill's date is before the mid-1920s, it's probably larger than current US paper money. Current-size bills were introduced during that decade.
However, it's not possible to tell if the bill is genuine without having it inspected in person by an expert. Anti-counterfeiting features were fairly primitive back then so it was relatively easy to create fakes.
If you mean size, all notes printed before series 1928 were large sized. If you mean larger denomination, there were $500, 1000, 5000, 10,000, and 100,000 notes printed. Notes having a denomination of larger than $100 has not been printed since 1945.
The Bank of Canada issued its first $1000 bill (or note) in 1935. Unlike the US which produced its last $1000 bill in 1945, Canada continued to print small numbers of $1000 bills through most of the 20th century. The last series was issued in 1992; the denomination was withdrawn in 2000 leaving $100 as the highest-denomination note still in circulation.
Grover Cleveland, the 22nd and 24th President of the United States, appeared on the $1000 bill (a denomination which, while still legal tender, no longer circulates in the United States).
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The last US $1000 bills were dated 1934. The highest denomination dated 1963 was $100.
No. The largest denomination currently in production is the $100 bill.
President Grover Cleveland was on a US one thousand dollar bill (US $1000), but currently the US $100 bill is the highest denomination in circulation.
A denomination is needed. Please determine your bill's denomination and look for the question "What is the value of a 1934 C US [denomination] dollar bill?"
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question with the bill's date and its correct denomination. Spain has never used dollars, only pesetas (up to 2002) and euros since then.
The largest denomination currently in circulation is $100. In the past, there were bills for $500, $1,000, $5,000, and $10,000, though none have been printed since the 1940s, and they were withdrawn in the late 1960s. There was also a $100,000 note, but it was only used between government agencies, not by the public.
The Chinese do not issue dollars in any denomination. 1000 Chinese yuan = 146.42400 U.S. dollars.
Pentecostal
I think they are about the same size.MoreRegardless of denomination, all current US paper bills are the same size (155.96 mm x 66.29 mm) and weight (1 gram). In many other countries, each bill is a different size as an anti-counterfeiting measure. Higher-denomination bills are larger which prevents counterfeiters from bleaching a low-value bill and reprinting it with a higher denomination. The US instead adds special hidden security strips to each denomination. The strips for each denomination are in different places and glow different colors under UV light.