All US currency is printed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
Note that the US Mint only makes coins, and has nothing to do with printing bills.
Three dollar bills exist but they were never issued by the US government, although the US issued a three dollar coin from 1854 to 1889. Earlier, some colonies printed three dollar bills. When banks were allowed to print money in the early days of the US, some printed legitimate, legal three dollar bills. The Confederacy also produced three dollar bills.
No. US one dollar bills were not made in 1950.
The US currently prints bills in the following denominations: $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100.
It doesn't cost the Mint anything because the Mint makes coins, not bills. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing prints bills. Anyway, the new purple and gray bills cost about 4 cents each to produce.
US $2 bills are printed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, the same agency that prints all US currency. Contrary to popular myth, $2 bills aren't rare, haven't been discontinued, and are still being produced. They only make up about 1% of all paper money in circulation but that still amounts to hundreds of millions of bills.
It's almost a trick question, but not quite. Remember that the US still prints $2 bills! All you need is four $2 bills to make $8 plus any combination that adds up to the remaining $55: One $5 bill and one $50 bill, eleven $5 bills, three $5 bills and two $20 bills, and so on.
Older dollar bills are indeed still in circulation. US bills aren't removed from circulation until they wear out.
You can get themat the bank.
No real US million dollar bills
It would be 12 dollars if only have 12 1 dollar US bills
You can exchange old US dollar bills for new currency at most banks, credit unions, or the Federal Reserve.
Detonated means exploded like a bomb. Dollar bills don't explode.