Results for “old money aesthetic”
A quiet-luxury aesthetic mimicking inherited wealth — no logos, just polo, loafers, and discreet expensive taste.
Someone rolling in cash — or the money emoji that flexes it.
Cash earned through your connect — money from the source or the hookup.
The poor soul left holding a worthless investment after everyone else cashed out.
Someone stuck holding a worthless or crashed asset, left holding the bag while others cashed out.
Impressively hard, skilful, and ruthless — high praise for a verse or beat.
Being present for someone's feelings without trying to fix them.
Cash earned from the hustle or grind — money made the hard way.
Kicking back totally relaxed and unbothered, cool with no worries at all.
A maximalist glam aesthetic — big fur coats, animal print, gold jewelry, and the energy of a Scorsese mafia matriarch.
The minimalist aesthetic of slick bun, dewy skin, gold hoops, and 'no-makeup' makeup.
Money, cash, dough, the most common Lunfardo word for the folding stuff.
Money — older slang for cash, named for the green color of bills.
A scholarly, moody aesthetic of tweed, old libraries, candlelight, classic literature, and gothic university romance.
Pirated, cracked software distributed illegally, a cornerstone term of old BBS and scene culture.
An all-out hot-pink, hyper-glam aesthetic inspired by Barbie — head-to-toe fuchsia and unapologetic plastic fantasy.
A scheme to hype a coin up, sell at the peak, and leave latecomers holding the crash.
The breakup letter every soldier dreaded — the homefront sweetheart calling it off while he's away.
Money, especially a thick stack of it — getting cake means getting paid.
To make money and provide — everybody at the table getting fed.
Korean for 'older brother' used by men — fandom-speak for the elder male members.
A "traditional wife" aesthetic and online persona centered on homemaking, often idealized and aestheticized on social media.
A meme-spelled 'friend' for fellow holders — the wholesome word of crypto community.
The early-2000s aesthetic revival — low-rise jeans, baby tees, butterfly clips, and shiny futuristic chrome.
Cockney back-slang for 'pound' — the big money, said backwards.
Polari for pretty, nice or sweet — as in 'your dolly old eek'.
A beat-up, rattletrap old automobile held together by hope and tape.
A thick roll of cash folded and tied off — a fat wad of bills.
Money or profit — 'getting coin' means getting paid.
Real conversation about money — making it, moving it, multiplying it.
Like my status — an old social-media call for likes; can also mean let me see.
Nadsat for an old woman, from the Russian 'babushka' (grandmother).
Old-school ballroom slang for stealing — especially clothes to compete in.
Large amounts of money — often a stack means a thousand dollars.
A long stretch of falling prices and gloom — the cold winter after the bull run.
Cockney rhyming slang for money — 'bees' for short.
Boy-crazy for men in uniform — the 1940s term for a girl smitten with soldiers.
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.
A mystical 90s-witchy aesthetic — crescent moons, velvet, crystals, tarot, and a dreamy dark-romantic vibe.
Nadsat for old or ancient, from the Russian 'stary'.
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.
To hold a coin no matter what, never selling through any crash — born from a famous typo.
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.