Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - The commemorative banknotes for the Beijing Winter Olympics have arrived. What are the highlights of this commemorative banknote?

The commemorative banknotes for the Beijing Winter Olympics have arrived. What are the highlights of this commemorative banknote?

The People's Bank of China is scheduled to issue a set of commemorative banknotes for the 24th Winter Olympics on February 2 1 day and February 2 1 day, including 1 set of commemorative banknotes for ice sports and 65,438 sets of commemorative banknotes for snow sports. The commemorative banknotes for ice sports are plastic banknotes, while those for snow sports are paper banknotes.

The People's Bank of China is scheduled to issue a set of commemorative banknotes for the 24th Winter Olympics on February 202 1 and February 2 1, with the denomination of 20 yuan. Among them, ice sports 1 commemorative banknotes, snow sports 1 commemorative banknotes. The commemorative banknotes for ice sports are plastic banknotes, while those for snow sports are paper banknotes. A set of two winter Olympic banknotes issued this time, one on the ice and the other on the water, is beautifully designed.

With 1 plastic banknotes, the ice movement is plastic banknotes and the snow movement is paper banknotes. Friends who play commemorative banknotes know that the earliest plastic banknotes were century dragon banknotes with a face value of 100 yuan issued in 2000. Under the irradiation of fluorescent lights, commemorative banknotes present colorful and beautiful patterns, and they feel like they are coming up at once. The face value of 20 yuan is also the first issue in China. China has issued five commemorative banknotes, the face value of which is generally 10 yuan (commemorative banknotes for the Summer Olympic Games), 50 yuan (commemorative banknotes for the 70th anniversary of the issuance of RMB to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China) and 100 yuan.

One person is limited to purchase 10 pairs of winter Olympic banknotes. A * * * has nine digits, and so do the last few digits. In China, the two with the same tails are called Dui (double tails), and the three with the same tails are called leopards, followed by lions, tigers, elephants, dinosaurs and Kirin. As for Kyubi no Youko banknotes, there are only two kinds in theory (it is possible to skip the number), and there is no common name for Kyubi no Youko banknotes on the Internet. You can refer to the 70-note banknotes with the same number. After you get the commemorative banknote marked 10, you should not only check whether it has a beautiful name, but also remember to check whether it is marked 10. The symbol 10 refers to the ten consecutive digits of the last digit of the banknote number starting from 1-0.