Results for “Money Talk”
Someone rolling in cash — or the money emoji that flexes it.
Real conversation about money — making it, moving it, multiplying it.
When someone's saying something disrespectful, unreasonable, or out of pocket.
A quiet-luxury aesthetic mimicking inherited wealth — no logos, just polo, loafers, and discreet expensive taste.
Cash earned through your connect — money from the source or the hookup.
A sassy 'I'm not listening' delivered with a palm in your face.
Cash earned from the hustle or grind — money made the hard way.
The early phase of getting to know someone romantically, before you're officially together.
Money, especially a thick stack of it — getting cake means getting paid.
To make money and provide — everybody at the table getting fed.
Patois for a con artist, trickster, or smooth-talking hustler.
Mature content — open to view.
Cockney back-slang for 'pound' — the big money, said backwards.
To speak or talk in the cant — and to 'cut bene whids' was to speak fair and friendly.
Nadsat for to speak or talk, from the Russian 'govorit'.
The name of the cant itself — and a verb meaning to talk — Britain's secret gay language.
Money or profit — 'getting coin' means getting paid.
Large amounts of money — often a stack means a thousand dollars.
Cockney rhyming slang for money — 'bees' for short.
A phony, untrustworthy person who talks a big game but never backs it up.
Mature content — open to view.
Money in general — borrowing the Spanish word as a casual flex term.
Money — a cousin of 'guap,' all about the cash flow.
Nadsat for money or cash, one of its few non-Russian terms.
To collect a serious amount of money or land a big win.
Money — UK slang, short for "pounds"; "making P's" means making money.
Money — British slang for cash.
A money-making gig you do alongside your main job.
Paying a premium for a reserved table and full bottles at a club — flexing money.
Nonsense, lies, or foolish talk, the meaty cousin of 'applesauce.'
Money, cash, dough, the most common Lunfardo word for the folding stuff.
When a promising talking stage just loses energy and quietly dies on its own.
A smashed-together way of saying 'talking about' that AAVE speakers use all day.
Selling drugs to make money — the grind drill and trap music document.
A video where a host eats large amounts of food on camera while talking to viewers — a huge online genre.
Status, success, attention, money, or momentum, especially when someone is actively making things happen.
Mature content — open to view.
To talk way too much, especially about nothing — a yapper is someone who won't stop running their mouth.
Get the money, lock in the win, don't fumble the opportunity in front of you.
To show off your money, style, or success — flexing for the audience.
A con artist, bluffer or all-talk fraud, a beloved insult in porteno life.
A round where your team saves money instead of buying good gear.
Money, cash, paper — a tasty 2000s word for it.
Big money — the more commas in your bank balance, the richer you are.
To throw a big chunk of money into a coin or token fast, with little or no research.
Flat broke — no money until payday.
Cockney for money — 'bread and honey' rhymes with money, the likely root of 'bread' for cash.
A biscuit (cookie) — and 'big bickies' means a serious amount of money.