For letters weighing up to 100g that are no more than 5mm thick and up to C5 in sizeIf a single stamp or a small book of stamps are currently 27p each however if you have an account with the post office or a franking machine it's 24p. (Correct as at December 2008)
It's 39p for a first class stamp at the moment.
30 pence for a letter or card regular sized
Currently at December 2009 it's 39p
For a standard letter - 41p
Price of second class stamp
64p
One first class postage.
Enough stamps to equal first class postage of 49 cents, or a Forever stamp. It will also have an address.
Regular first class international postage from USPS is $0.98.
First Class Postage is 44 cents for the first ounce.
First ounce for First Class Postage was .29
44 cents is the going rate for an ordinary first class stamp.
There is only one Forever Stamp, it pictures the US Liberty Bell and says First Class Postage. It is good only for the first ounce of a letter, anything more in weight requires additional postage. There are many other non-denominated stamps that may say First Class Postage, but they are not Forever Stamps, they were created for a specific rate. These stamps are still valid for that amount of postage, but they must be supplemented to make the full rate necessary.
In the US for a first class mail letter (1 oz.) it is .44¢
{| |- | First Class stamps are used to send a normal letter of one ounce through the mail. In most cases a regular stamp is considered the first class stamp rate. Most commemorative stamps are to meet the First Class Postage rate. |}
It reqires 49 cents in postage to send a first class letter within the U.S.
To send a letter to France from the United States, you would need to use three first class stamps. You could save about 32 cents by letting the post office apply the postage.
Maybe, depending on where you are and when "last year" was. The US postal service began a few years ago issuing "forever" stamps that are first-class postage "forever" ... that is, they can be used to mail a first-class letter even if the cost of first-class postage goes up. These will say "forever" on them, and will not have a denomination other than that. They're priced at whatever the current first-class postage rate is. If a stamp does have a denomination on it, that's the value of the stamp. If that's insufficient for current postage rates, you will need to add stamps to make up the difference.