1 British Pound Sterling equals 1.66 US Dollar as of 3rd April 2014, note exchange rates change daily.
One British (sterling) pound = 1.16 Euros (9th Sept 2011). Note exchange rates change daily.
Current value would depend on condition. Ten bob,(Ten Shillings) was half a pound in sterling money. 20 shillings = 1 pound (£) That equates to 50p in todays money.
The Kuwaiti Dinar is the highest valued unit of currency.1 Kuwaiti Dinar is - at current rates - worth 2.02 Pounds Sterling or US $3.73As of Dec 27, 2010:1 Kuwaiti Dinar (KD) = 3.55 USD (US Dollar) = 2.29 GBP (Pounds Sterling).The most valuable banknotes in current general circulation (Dec 27, 2010) are :10,000 Singapore Dollar note (US$7,700)1,000 Swiss Franc note (US$1,050)1,000 Singapore Dollar note (US$770)500 Euro note (US$660)What_is_the_world's_most_expensive_banknote
If it is a current issue Mexican note, then it's worth $157. An old pre-1989 2000 Peso note is worth 60¢ - $4 in perfect condition to a collector.
The Greek 100 Drachmai note (Apaxmai Ekaton) from 1978 or later is worth about $2.50 in mint uncirculated condition and face value in any used condition - although superseded by the Euro in 2001, old notes can still be exchanged in Greek banks - about $0.40.
The publisher of the Rizal Ten Pound Sterling note is the Bank of the Philippines.
one thousand
The pound sterling is a coin minted by the Royal Mint. One bank in Scotland issues a One Pound note.
1 pound sterling
The ten pound sterling note is currency used in the Philippines. In 1961a picture of Jose Rizal appeared on the centennial coin.
The fifty pound Sterling note is the largest bank note in circulation in England.
The Bank of England One Hundred Pound note was last issued in 1943 and ceased to be legal tender in 1945. The Bank of England has no current plans to reintroduce the One Hundred Pound note in the immediate future.
1 British Pound Sterling equals 1.66 US Dollar as of 3rd April 2014, note exchange rates change daily.
The 50,000 Lira note dated 1970 was actually issued twice, in 1989 and 1995. They are identical except the 1995 note has the value in gray on the reverse. At the time of issue, the 1989 note was worth £23.00 at today's exchange rate. The 1995 note as today's exchange rate was worth £0.70. By the time the Lira was devalued in 2004, each note had a face value of approximately £0.04. As they are no longer legal tender, they have a value of nil. Neither note has a value for collectors unless they are 'uncirculated' (the top-level of quality), with an UNC 1989 note worth £7.50 and the 1995 worth £2.50.
A whole note is worth 4 beats, a half note is worth 2 beats, a quarter note is worth 1 beat, an eighth note is worth 1/2 a beat, a sixteenth note is worth 1/4 of a beat, a dotted half note is worth 3 beats, and a dotted quarter note is worth 1 and a 1/2 beats.
What makes you think the notes are counterfeit? Generally, unless there is an historic story associated with the counterfeit (like the operation Bernhardt English notes) the notes are worthless. There was a genuine issue 5,000,000 Drachmai note issued in 1944. A mint uncirculated example would be worth $3.