Probably get a Canadian to do a video like this. A moose? And you couldn’t explain what ships and people that is on our money. You did for 2 or 3 of them but you can tell you have no idea on the rest.
It should also be noted that officially our coins are not called “penny”, “nickel”, “dime” or “quarter”. They are actually “1-cent piece”, “5-cent piece”, “10-cent piece”, “25-cent piece”. However, we do use the “traditional” dime, nickel, and quarter in general life. It should also be noted that the 1-cent piece is still legal tender and you can still use them in cash transactions. As well, you seemed to have forgotten our 50-cent piece which is still produced. Granted, it isn’t generally circulated anymore by the mint but was as recently as 2002 and can still be used as legal tender in any cash transaction.
@@LoulaGaming Try again. "According to the Royal Canadian Mint, the official term for the coin is the one-cent piece, but in practice the terms penny and cent predominate."
@@VisitTorontoVideos That's the back (reverse). The Queen is on the front (obverse). Just because the fronts all have the same person on them, it still seems odd to not at least show one.
@@juliansmith4295 the front of the coin has the animal on it, and the dollar value. the back only has the queen and country, and in some cases the year.
@@HLL_pepper I don't know where you're getting your information. The monarch appears on the obverse. The reverse has the animal. Reverse doesn't mean the front. My source is the Royal Canadian Mint.
@@juliansmith4295 waddya know, you’re absolutely right. But nobody cares about the front/heads of the coin, tails is the part that’s different and interesting.
As an American, I think Canadian currency is beautiful! I really dig it. I also love the transparent parts included and the Hologram effect. Very very nice monies.
Cool money , I want to rebuild there and willing to do what it takes to make our rebirth better for the daughters and futures black canadians ❤. Yeah, I seen Queen Elizabeth , as well, and I believe, one son she was saying done something.
With the Polymer bills years ago when they came out, everyone from people I talked to in canada and America said they smelled like maple syrup but when I handled them, I didn't notice anything other than just, neutral plastic smell. Then over the years I noticed as these kept going around and round, some of them did start smelling like maple syrup to me. I think its just the inks they use.
I have a jar of random coins from countries and canadian stuff, and I keep a bunch of pennies of which one is a 1930's King Georgie Penny. Sadly the one time I looked it up thinking I might have a rare coin, turns out its not one of the rare King George Pennies worth I think like 1300 Canadian dollars. Oh well, the pennies are still interesting to me, along with the 50 cent coins, commemerative coins, and foreign coins like an egyptian pound
The Queen on the twenty dollar bill is there as she was Queen and Head of State of Canada, not just the Commonwealth. That role is now taken up by King Charles III.
Since your bills are an Australian invention, polymer notes, your colour scheme is the same as well but in the wrong order to ours. Ours are: $5 Purple, $10 Blue, $20 Orange, $50 Yellow, $100 Green.
Thank you for sharing details. They were insightful. One of the good things about Canadian money bills is its form, a polymer based compound bill that stays good for long duration from the issued date. I have a question here. Do Canadian bills work in U.S.A.?
Typically Canada will accept US$ - with a bad exchange rate- but I have never seen a US outlet accept Canadian $. Not even when we had pennies. They would give us back the Canadian 1 cent.
Do different $20-100$ cad bills have different signatures at bottom left of deputy signature please let me know i dont wanna have been gotten scammed from Kijiji yesterday:(((