Advertisement
Advertisement
greenback
/ ˈɡriːnˌbæk /
noun
- informal.an inconvertible legal-tender US currency note originally issued during the Civil War in 1862
- slang.a dollar bill
Word History and Origins
Origin of greenback1
Example Sentences
That would narrow the interest rate differential boosting the greenback.
Not long ago, back in March, the greenback soared as equities fell.
The greenback accounted for a far larger share of global banking transactions, as the Communist Party resists calls to ease currency controls.
The euro is up 9% against the greenback since April as dollar-shorts build up.
(The Brazilian real is down a world-beating 21 percent against the greenback since May).
The rest came in a currency then thought far more valuable than the greenback: Facebook stock.
Already money markets have begun to adjust the Australian dollar, which in recent months has enjoyed parity with the greenback.
The federal salvo was the first multiagency money-laundering task force ever assembled, the U.S. Customs–IRS Operation Greenback.
You fed one greenback to a cab-horse down at the Caf Boulevard, said Tootles, trying to be helpful.
"Well, I declare," muttered the Deacon, as he fished a greenback out of a leather pocketbook fastened with a long strap.
The doctor purchased and paid for the dogs, handing the boy a crisp five dollar greenback bill.
It was on this intense labor discontent that the greenback agitation fed and grew.
The aggregate greenback vote cast in the election exceeded a million, and fourteen Representatives were sent to Congress.
Advertisement
Related Words
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse