Why is money called wedge?

In formal english a wedge is a triangular shaped tool, used to split open an object. Its connotations with money arise from when coins could be split into quarters so exact weights could be measured. The shape of these sections was a wedge. Nowadays “a wedge” is a pay-packet amount of money or the amount someone earns.
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Why is money called Lolly?

lolly = money. More popular in the 1960s than today. Precise origin unknown. Possibly rhyming slang linking lollipop to copper.
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Why is money called bread?

The origin of “Bread” as a name for Money comes from the English Cockney Rhyming Slang term, “Bread and Honey” meaning Money. The term dough could be derived as a further slang term from Bread.
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What is the slang for $100?

$100 bill is occasionally "C-note" (C being the Roman numeral for 100, from the Latin word centum) or "century note"; it can also be referred to as a "Benjamin" or "Benny" (after Benjamin Franklin, who is pictured on the note), or a "yard" (so $300 is "3 yards" and a $50 bill is a "half a yard").
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Why is 500 called a monkey?

The term was coined by British soldiers returning from India where the 500 rupee note of that era had a picture of a monkey on it. They used the term monkey for 500 rupees and on returning to England the saying was converted to sterling to mean £500.
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What gives a dollar bill its value? - Doug Levinson



Why is a pound called a nicker?

Not pluralised for a number of pounds, eg., 'It cost me twenty nicker..' From the early 1900s, London slang, precise origin unknown. Possibly connected to the use of nickel in the minting of coins, and to the American slang use of nickel to mean a $5 dollar note, which at the late 1800s was valued not far from a pound.
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Why do Cockneys call 25 a pony?

Whilst this is not cemented in fact, the widely held belief is that the terms came from soldiers returning to Britain from India. Old Indian rupee banknotes had animals on them and it is said that the 500 rupee note had a monkey on it and the 25 rupee featured a pony.
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What's a Benji money?

noun. slang US. A one-hundred-dollar bill.
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What is a Texas penny?

a $100 bill. I see your fifty, and raise you a Texas penny. See more words with the same meaning: money.
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What is a Benjamin in money?

Definition of Benjamin (Entry 2 of 2) US slang. : a hundred dollar bill Along the way, he amassed a small fortune, which he keeps in neat stacks of Benjamins in a closet by his bed.—
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Why is money called cheese?

Meaning: Slang term for money. Derived from the fact Americans on welfare used to receive cheese as part of their benefits. Explanation: This well-known American phrase was born at the end of the Second World War.
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Why is a dollar called a clam?

In any event, clams as a synonym for the dollar derives from the “use of various shells as units of exchange.” Native Americans used clams and other shells as currency well into the 19th century.
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Why are $100 bills called C notes?

"C-note" is slang for a $100 bill. The term was derived from the Roman numeral "C" for 100. The $100 bill once had a capital "C" in its upper-left corner.
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Why is money called Rhino?

Rhino – No one knows for sure where this 400-year-old term for money comes from. Some people link it to the value of rhino horn or the idea of paying through the nose (rhinoceros is from the Greek for “nose-horn”). Perhaps the arrival of the first rhino in Britain suggested the sense of something valuable.
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Why is a house called a gaff?

Then there's the British slang meaning of gaff for the place where one lives (“come round my gaff for a coffee”), which is almost certainly derived from the use of gaff in the eighteenth-century to mean a fair, and later a cheap music-hall or theatre (as in the infamous penny gaff) and which probably comes from the ...
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Why is a thousand called a grand?

The name 'grand' for $ 1,000 comes from a $ 1,000 banknote with the portrait of Ulysses Grant, 18th president of the USA. The banknote was called a “Grant”, which overtime became 'grand'.
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What are golden pennies?

Golden pennies provide tax revenue that is not subject to recapture by the State of Texas. Using golden pennies is an exercise of LOCAL control. Voters decide to access the pennies; all the revenue generated by them stays in the school district.
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Are there gold pennies?

Generally, when people talk about a gold penny, they are talking about a normal penny that has been treated to give it a gold color. In some cases, however, a penny may actually have been plated with gold. And in some even rarer cases, a penny may have been struck accidentally on a blank of the wrong metal.
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Can you turn a penny into gold?

A copper penny appears to turn to silver after heating in an evaporating dish with a mixture. The penny then appears to turn to gold when heated in a flame. Heat causes a fusion of zinc and copper to form brass (gold-colored). Brass is 60-82% Cu and 18-40% Zn.
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What is a pineapple in money?

The fifty dollar note is called a Pineapple, and a hundred dollar note a 'jolly green giant” or a lime or even a 'green tree frog'.
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Why is money called scratch?

Growing up in the upper Midwest, scratch was the term used for the money we had to scratch (scrape) together for any purchase.
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What is a pineapple slang?

People post a certain fruit that corresponds with a different relationship status. Blueberry means you're single. Cherries mean you're in a relationship. But, if your love life isn't quite so straightforward, you have another option: pineapple means it's complicated.
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What does custard mean in Cockney?

"No one's watching the custard" means "no one's watching the TV." "Custard and jelly" rhymes with "telly."
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What is a gorilla in money terms?

Gorilla: A thousand dollars.
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What is a cockle in Cockney slang?

Cockle is Cockney slang for 10 pounds (tenner).
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