For political reasons, US $1 bills haven't undergone a major redesign in over 80 years.
The underlying paper gives them a slightly gray background.
The front of the bill is printed in black ink while the seal and serial numbers are in bright green.
The back of the bill is printed in green ink.
$1 bills dated 1957 and earlier were similar except that the seal and serial numbers were generally in blue ink, although other colors were used for special issues.
Other denominations:
$2 bills follow the same pattern as $1 bills.
$5 bills have the dominant colors purple and gray
$10 bills are red, orange, and yellow
$20 bills are green, blue, and peach
$50 bills are red, white, and blue
$100 bills are blue, copper-brown, and green
The Bahamian Dollar is pegged 1:1 with the US Dollar, so a $1 Bahamas bill is worth exactly $1 US Dollar.
A thousand dollar bill is almost the same color in likeness to a 1 dollar bill except for darker designs around the bill.
There is no one million dollar bill in US currency.
About 1 gram
All current US bills have a mass of about 1 gram, regardless of denomination.
No. George Washington is on the front of the US one Dollar bill.
No. The US has never printed a 1 million dollar bill, and no US bills of any denomination are dated 1940.
A dollar bill (or any denomination bill) weighs 1 gram.
One US dollar.
The average ONE dollar bill, if new is 6.14 inches long.
It is not George Washington. He is on the US 1-dollar cotton bill.
it is a N