In early America, before money was widely spread, goods were traded in exchange for other goods. A common need was 'buck skin' for clothing so that a 'buck' became a form of currency as a unit of value for anything else. The original explanation may have come from the American Indian who traded with 'goods' as a form of currency, including the Buckskin.
The term "buck" for dollars is believed to have originated during the colonial era. Deer hides were commonly used as a form of currency, with each hide being referred to as a "buck." Over time, the term "buck" became synonymous with dollars.
Some common slang terms for 5 dollars include "five bucks" or simply "five."
"Benjamins" or "bucks."
In the sentence "Joe owes Jim five bucks," "Jim" is the indirect object (receives the action indirectly) and "five bucks" is the direct object (receives the action directly). There is nothing grammatically wrong in this sentence.
sixty eight dollars
You spell 34 dollars like thirty-four dollars.
Dollars (doal-urs). Although some ppl call it "bucks"
you get another 20 bucks LOL
Ten thousand dollars.
37 bucks
$10, or ten US dollars.
---- 1000 is only 10 bucks 10000 is a hundred bucks
Thirty Five bucks.
its not its like 15 bucks
bucks, coins, dollars, any money resource
Just above 43 bucks
£10000 is $12135
u call them with a doe call. . Rattle with a pair of antlers.