Crosswords35 mins ago
�50
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Slang term for �50.
I have ssen it as half a ton or a pinky. any other suggestions or what do you think?
I have ssen it as half a ton or a pinky. any other suggestions or what do you think?
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'Nifty', for some. Here's what Michael Quinion - a genuine lexicographer/language expert - has to say...
"A term for �50, which I have never heard and which is in none of my reference books, was given by Jeff Howell in an article in the Independent on Sunday. He claims that 'nifty' is now a London builders� term for that sum.
It sounds plausible, as being an obvious rhyme."
Like him, I have never heard it used either and I've been around for a long, long time!
"A term for �50, which I have never heard and which is in none of my reference books, was given by Jeff Howell in an article in the Independent on Sunday. He claims that 'nifty' is now a London builders� term for that sum.
It sounds plausible, as being an obvious rhyme."
Like him, I have never heard it used either and I've been around for a long, long time!
In the early 19th century, a bull or bull's-eye was a crown or five shillings. Dickens wrote in Bleak House in the 1850s: "Four halfbulls or wot you may call halfcrowns."
If 'bull's-eye' now means �50.00, it must be a relative newcomer to the money-slang list, given that 'pony' dates back to the 1790s and 'monkey' to the 1830s.
I don't doubt that 'bull's-eye' is used by some for �50.00 nowadays, but I've certainly never heard it.
If 'bull's-eye' now means �50.00, it must be a relative newcomer to the money-slang list, given that 'pony' dates back to the 1790s and 'monkey' to the 1830s.
I don't doubt that 'bull's-eye' is used by some for �50.00 nowadays, but I've certainly never heard it.
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Have you any idea when this usage appeared on the scene, LH? As my quote from him shows, neither the language expert, Michael Quinion, nor any of his sources has any record of it. Nor have I and nor has The Oxford English Dictionary, published in the late 1980s. Presumably it appeared in the Nineties. Have you any background on the matter at all?
It's also used in Bingo apparently, got this from a Bingo site about the origin of the bingo numbers slang terms:
50. Bulls Eye: This piece of bingo slang comes from the game of darts, which for those who do not know, is a popular game in the United Kingdom which entails throwing small, flighted darts at a circular board divided up into numbered segments. The centre of this board is typically a small, circular dot called the "Bull's Eye" which, if hit, is worth 50 points. Hence 50 = Bulls Eye.
Form the slang dictionary :-
Monkey Noun. �500. Occasionally and confusingly also �50.
http://www.peevish.co.uk/slang/m.htm
Wiki says �500
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_%28slang%2 9
Monkey Noun. �500. Occasionally and confusingly also �50.
http://www.peevish.co.uk/slang/m.htm
Wiki says �500
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_%28slang%2 9