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Slang terms for money often derive from the appearance and features of banknotes or coins, their values, historical associations or the units of currency concerned. Within a language community, some of the slang terms vary in social, ethnic, economic, and geographic strata but others have become the dominant way of referring to the currency and are regarded as mainstream, acceptable language ...
C-note - slang for $100 bill (for the Roman numeral C, meaning 100) Cabbage [6] ... – USD $20 bill; Kiwi – slang term for the currency of New Zealand [5] Large [9
Other nicknames include C-note (C being the Roman numeral for 100), century note, or bill (e.g. two bills = $200). Amounts or multiples of $1,000 are sometimes called grand in colloquial speech, abbreviated in written form to G, K, or k (from kilo; e.g. $10k = $10,000).
The one-dollar bill has the oldest overall design of all U.S. currency currently being produced. [note 1] The reverse design of the present dollar debuted in 1935, and the obverse in 1963 when it was first issued as a Federal Reserve Note (previously, one-dollar bills were Silver Certificates). A dollar bill is composed of 25% linen and
Like the previous $10,000 bill, these bills produced in 1928 and 1934 also bear the likeness of Salmon P. Chase on the front. However, the back of the bill simply says, “The United States of ...
C-note (bill), slang for the United States one-hundred-dollar bill; C (musical note), the first note of the C major scale; C-Note (Prison Break), a character in Prison Break; cNote, an animated short by Christopher Hinton; The C Note, an episode of Recess "C Note", an instrumental by Body Count from Body Count
On the back of the bill the eagle is holding 13 arrows and an olive branch with 13 leaves and 13 olives. The eagle's shield has 13 vertical stripes and 13 horizontal stripes. The number 13 ...
Undis' site has many bills for sale in that range -- a hundred with the "solid" 11111111 going for $4,000, for example. Speaking of Benjamins, ...