A Benjamin.
Here in Boston we would call it a (C) note. C is the Roman numeral for 100.
They're also known as Benjamins because they carry a portrait of Benjamin Franklin.
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∙ 6y agoWiki User
∙ 12y agoA ten dollar bill is called a sawbuck. It comes from Chicago. Some very old $10 bills had the Roman numeral X (meaning 10) as part of their design. Since a sawhorse is shaped with an X on both sides the ten dollar bill became a sawbuck.
"Hundy" is a common nickname for a hundred dollar bill.
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∙ 13y ago5 bones or an Abe (referring to Abraham Lincoln, who is pictured on the 5 dollar bill)
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∙ 14y agoStreet Nickname ! "A Ball" Coined expression by Joseph Wilkes A.K.A. "Sweat Suit Joe" all Hustlers know this, like they know what the "Arm" is.
Wendell A.K.A. SHORTY SPORTY
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∙ 13y agoBuck, dough, green.
Anonymous
Abe
A c-note is a nickname for a hundred dollar bill. The "c" in c-note stands for "century," which is another word for a hundred. This term likely originated from the Roman numeral "C" for 100.
a half hundred dollar bill is worth $50
Australian Dollar it is a Pineapple.
one hundred dollars is equal to twenty times five dollars, but there are NO five dollar bills in a hundred dollar bill.
times it by 100.
Yes there used to be a five hundred dollar bill. President William McKinley was featured on the face of bill. The five hundred dollar bill stopped being produced in 1934.
There are no nickels inside a one hundred dollar bill, nor is there any nickel material in the bill. A one hundred dollar bill has the same monetary value as 2000 nickels.
A hundred dollar bill has Benjamin Franklin on it.
one hundred dollar bill and two dollar bill
There is no hundred thousand dollar bill. The highest denomination currently in use in US currency is the one hundred dollar bill. There was, at one time, a one hundred thousand dollar "bill", but it was used only for transactions between branches of the federal government and never issued for general use. It featured Woodrow Wilson.
lonnie (1$) toonie (2$) five dollar bill ten dollar bill twenty dollar bill fifty dollar bill and the one hundred dollar bill
The One Hundred Dollar Bill - 1911 was released on: USA: 4 August 1911