#money
127 words tagged “money”
A standard full-time job with regular daytime hours.
Money — British slang for cash.
Brand-new, never-worn gear — especially sneakers still in original condition with the box.
To throw a big chunk of money into a coin or token fast, with little or no research.
Someone stuck holding a worthless or crashed asset, left holding the bag while others cashed out.
Someone relentlessly focused on making money — chasing the bag above all else.
Money — older slang for cash, named for the green color of bills.
Someone who looks stylish and confident while crushing it at an office job.
Money — chasing paper means chasing cash.
Luxurious, high-class, or fancy — living or acting upscale; from bourgeois.
To aggressively promote a coin you hold, hyping it so others buy and pump your bags.
Heads up — there's money to be made right here, right now.
Corporate speak for briefly checking in with someone.
Cockney rhyming slang for skint — totally broke, from 'boracic lint'.
The belief that you must constantly work and grind to be worthy or successful.
Working From Home.
Stacks of cash — from the rubber bands around bundles of bills; a "band" is $1,000.
Money, cash, dough, the most common Lunfardo word for the folding stuff.
Slang for 'work' or a 'job' — the daily grind.
Cash money — green like a head of lettuce.
We're all gonna make it — a hype mantra of solidarity and shared optimism.
A meme-spelled hype shout for a coin to go up — 'pump it' with extra chaos.
To show off your money, style, or success — flexing for the audience.
Cheap, ordinary wine — British slang born from WWI soldiers mangling 'vin blanc'.
The poor soul left holding a worthless investment after everyone else cashed out.
A rallying cry that a coin's price is about to skyrocket — straight up, no limit.
The specific color combo a shoe or garment comes in — same model, different palette.
Wrecked — financially destroyed by a bad trade, or just badly beaten at anything.
Easing into the work week by doing only the essentials on Monday.
A scheme to hype a coin up, sell at the peak, and leave latecomers holding the crash.
Money — a cousin of 'guap,' all about the cash flow.
Not gonna make it — a verdict that someone or something is doomed to fail.
A notice that you've been fired or laid off.
A long stretch of falling prices and gloom — the cold winter after the bull run.
Money, especially a serious amount of it.
A car — especially a stylish or expensive one.
To hold a coin no matter what, never selling through any crash — born from a famous typo.
To show off — to flaunt money, status, looks, or achievements.
To go make money or secure a financial win.
Money — UK slang, short for "pounds"; "making P's" means making money.
Money, especially a thick stack of it — getting cake means getting paid.
Fully decked out in stylish, expensive-looking clothes and jewelry from head to toe.
Unrealistic or excessive hope you cling to despite the odds — like a drug.
A thick roll of cash folded and tied off — a fat wad of bills.
A British pound (£) — "a quid" means one pound; it stays the same in the plural.
Cockney back-slang for 'half' — half a coin, half a measure, half the price.
Thousands of dollars in cash — one rack is $1,000.
Selling drugs to make money — the grind drill and trap music document.
A mindset obsessed with hustle, discipline, and constant self-improvement — sometimes sincere, often mocked.
Flashy, expensive jewelry — the sparkle of chains, rings, and diamonds.
Cash earned from the hustle or grind — money made the hard way.
Money, cash, paper — a tasty 2000s word for it.
Frantically applying to lots of jobs out of frustration with your current one.
Go get the money — stop wasting time and chase that paper.
Money, cash — 'I'm saving up some dosh.'
Top-tier near-flawless diamonds — the clarity grade rappers name-drop to flex how clean their ice is.
Cash earned through your connect — money from the source or the hookup.
Status, success, attention, money, or momentum, especially when someone is actively making things happen.
A reckless gambler-trader who chases high-risk plays for the thrill — worn as a badge of pride.
Someone rolling in cash — or the money emoji that flexes it.
To get something through smooth skill or slick manoeuvring — sometimes by trickery.
Flat broke — no money until payday.
Selling at the first dip out of fear — weak hands that fold under any pressure.
Only do the amount of work your pay actually justifies.
Corporate speak for returning to a topic later.
Impatiently asking when a coin will make you rich enough to buy a Lamborghini.
To level up, take control, and improve your status or finances.
Money, plain and simple — the cheddar, the paper, the cash.
To start working — also used jokingly for showing up to do anything.
Get the money, lock in the win, don't fumble the opportunity in front of you.
To buy or grab something, especially a hyped drop you've been waiting on.
Sarcastic understatement hinting that some crypto news is actually a huge deal.
A huge payday — the kind of money that changes your whole situation.
To make money and provide — everybody at the table getting fed.
Holding an asset through brutal crashes without selling — nerves of steel, hands of diamond.
Secretly working multiple full-time remote jobs at once.
Covered in diamonds and flashy jewelry — dripping in 'ice' from chains to watch.
Effortlessly stylish clothes, jewelry, and overall swagger — looking expensive and put-together.
Flashy, expensive designer gear worn loud to flex — UK slang leaning a bit gaudy.
To steadily accumulate small amounts of Bitcoin over time — "sats" being the smallest unit.
A lifestyle of ease, comfort, and minimal stress, by deliberate choice.
Cockney back-slang for 'money' — the day's takings, said backwards.
Seriously rich — pockets stacked, money everywhere.
Leaving a new job almost immediately after starting it.
A low-stress, decent-paying job with flexible hours and little pressure.
Locked into money mode — focused entirely on getting paid.
Money or profit — 'getting coin' means getting paid.
Someone who buys hyped brands and drops just to flex, often chasing clout over real taste.
To spend a large amount of money on something, no flinching.
A dream piece you've been hunting forever — the holy-grail item of your collection.
A scam where the creators dump and vanish, pulling the rug out from under investors.
Real conversation about money — making it, moving it, multiplying it.
Money — classic, long-running slang for cash.
An extended stretch of rising prices and euphoria when everything seems to go up.
Money, cash, paper — a classic West Coast term for the green.
Cockney rhyming slang for money — 'bees' for short.
A quiet-luxury aesthetic mimicking inherited wealth — no logos, just polo, loafers, and discreet expensive taste.
Nadsat for money or cash, one of its few non-Russian terms.
A meme-spelled 'friend' for fellow holders — the wholesome word of crypto community.
Paying a premium for a reserved table and full bottles at a club — flexing money.
An ambitious woman in business — now often used ironically.
Mentally checked out — done caring or paying attention.
Money, cash, or earnings — the dough you work for.
Doing only the minimum required at work, without actually resigning.
The riskiest, wildest frontier of crypto — hunting new memecoins and speculative launches; also street slang for a rough area.
Working hard and consistently toward a goal, especially making money.
To collect a serious amount of money or land a big win.
Cockney back-slang for 'penny' — the smallest coin, said backwards over the barrow.
Mature content — open to view.
Large amounts of money — often a stack means a thousand dollars.
Cockney for a fiver — Lady Godiva rhymes with five-er, so a fiver becomes a 'Lady'.
Fear of missing out — the panic that makes you buy a pump late just to not be left behind.
Total physical and mental exhaustion from prolonged stress, usually work.
A money-making gig you do alongside your main job.
A crypto scam where developers abandon a project and run off with investors' money.
Removable jeweled mouthpieces — gold, silver, or diamond caps you snap over your teeth.
A meme-spelled 'sir' used to address fellow traders, both respectfully and ironically.
Someone holding so much of a coin that their buys and sells move the whole market.
A large amount of money — slang for serious cash.
Buying more when the price drops, betting the asset recovers — bargain hunting the red.
Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt — negativity spread to scare people out of something.
Money in general — borrowing the Spanish word as a casual flex term.
Showing off your money, status, or wins — putting it on display.
Big money — the more commas in your bank balance, the richer you are.
The Mexican office-worker stereotype — the corporate nine-to-five drone.
Cockney back-slang for 'pound' — the big money, said backwards.
Cockney for money — 'bread and honey' rhymes with money, the likely root of 'bread' for cash.