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Chivalry Posted 14 years ago
Vocabulary

Hundred dollar bills

Do American people call hundred-dollar bills "hunds"?
That's what I heard in a TV show, and the substitles indicated it meant hundred-dollar bills.
And, just for your information, only results about Hund's Rules popped out after I googled that term.
  

Top answer

I've never heard the expression. "

  • I've never heard the expression.
  • "
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3 Answers
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I've never heard the expression.
Often, you'll hear, "a C note", "a Benjamin" or "a wad of Bennies."
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This could be the latest cutting-edge street slang: "I want it all in hunds.", although I personally have never heard it used. This seems possible, as "C note" has been around since the 1920's, "Benjamin Franklins" is too long and academic-sounding, and "hundreds" is maybe too square-sounding for the street today.
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chivalryDo American people call hundred-dollar bills "hunds"?
It's possible that some younger people use this as a slang term.

"hundo" is another slang term for it.

http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=hundo

I doubt that anyone

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