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.
It is not George Washington. He is on the US 1-dollar cotton bill.
Please check your bill again. Its date should be 1935. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1935 US 1 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?"
The only bill fitting that description is a silver certificate. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1923 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
All current US bills, regardless of denomination, are 156 mm long × 66.3 mm wide, and have a mass of 1 gm.
The Bahamian Dollar is pegged 1:1 with the US Dollar, so a $1 Bahamas bill is worth exactly $1 US Dollar.
There is no one million dollar bill in US currency.
US currency bills are are 2.61 inches wide and 6.14 inches long; they are .0043 inches thick and weigh 1 gram.
A one US dollar bill weighs about one gram.
The mass of a US one dollar bill is approximately 1 gram.
No. George Washington is on the front of the US one Dollar bill.
The size of a dollar bill is 6.6294cm (2.61") wide, by 15.5956cm (6.14") long, and 0.010922cm (0.0043") in thickness.[1]
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.
The average ONE dollar bill, if new is 6.14 inches long.
One US dollar.