The 2 dollar bill is in circulation, but it is very unpopular. It has been years, I think, since I have seen one.
MoreContrary to rumors, the denomination has not been discontinued or withdrawn. There is a low but steady demand for the bills so they're printed on an as-needed basis. As of 2013 there have been printings with the series dates 1976, 1995, 2003, 2006, and 2009.$2 bills remain unpopular as noted due to a lack of familiarity among most Americans. There have been famous cases where people have been accused of (and even arrested for) attempted fraud when trying to spend them! Also, in some parts of the country there is a persistent myth that the bills are "tainted" or "cursed", which of course has no real basis in fact but may be due to the denomination's use many decades ago at race tracks and in brothels.
No, there is not such thing as a $3 bill.
The 'yuan' is one name. yuan is the name of the denomination being used. The correct name of the currency = Renminbi. since most western countries don't distinguish between denomination & currency, it's the same name as the currency. But it's distinguished in Chinese. Renminbi = currency. yuan = denomination. RMB/Renminbi: Yuan [compare to US "dollar bill"] > jiao [compare to US "dime"] > fen [compare to US "penny"]. 10 jiao = 1 yuan just like 10 US dimes = 1 US dollar. 1 yuan = 100 fen just like 1 US dollar = 100 US pennies. There's no equivalent to the US quarter in RMBs. Saying "1 yuan RMB" = saying "1 dollar [denomination: 1,5,10,20, 50, 100, etc... dollars] (in) US dollars [currency]".
If you are talking of the Us 2 dollar bill, yes it is legal tender. If you are talking of the Australian 2 dollar bill, then no as it is no longer a circulated denomination except in the form of a coin.
Yes, It can be recycled into new currency
It would depend on the year of issue and the denomination.
The largest denomination of IS currency is the $100.00 bill.
The largest denomination of IS currency is the $100.00 bill.
No. There were no 2005 series bills of any denomination.
While a $200 denomination might be a sensible addition to US currency, the US has never printed that bill.
Yes. United States has been printing currency in the 100 Dollar denomination since 1861 and does so still to this day.
From what country? There are no bills with that peculiar denomination in any of the major countries whose currency is denominated in dollars.
Ulysses S. Grant on the $50 dollar bill.
The largest denomination of currency the US prints today is the $100 bill.
The largest denomination of U.S. currency ever produced was the $100,000 bill, featuring President Woodrow Wilson. However, these bills were used only for transactions between Federal Reserve Banks and were never in public circulation.
AnswerRegardless of denomination a currency note is approximately 1 gram. 1 ounce = approximately 28.35 gramsapproximately 454 notes in 1lb
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question with its denomination. Vietnam does not use dollars as its currency.
1 dollar.