It is technically an idiom, as it means paying the highest amount for something -- aka the "top" of the dollar amount.
"Benjamins" or "bucks."
"Sawbuck" is slang for a $10 bill. The term originated from the X-shaped stand used to hold wood for sawing, resembling the Roman numeral for 10, "X".
The British slang 'top hole' originates from the term "top whole one" used in British boarding schools to mean "excellent" or "first-rate." Over time, it evolved into the shortened version 'top hole', used to describe something of high quality or top-notch.
That is the correct spelling of the noun "buck" meaning a male deer or elk, or the slang term for a dollar.
Slang in the 1920s included phrases like "cat's meow" (something excellent), "bee's knees" (top quality), and "23 skidoo" (to leave quickly). Other popular slang terms from the 1920s were "flapper" (a fashionable young woman), "daddy-o" (a term of address for a man), and "hooch" (alcohol).
Dollar could be: "Buck" or "green"
Bucks.
Slang term of dollar
"ducats", hip-hop slang for $
As a noun, a scoot is slang for a dollar, or a scooter.
As a noun, a scoot is slang for a dollar, or a scooter.
The palindrome for 'slang for mister' is 'Mr. top not slang for mister'.
A five-dollar bill is called a fin, or a finif, from The Yiddish finf, or five.
It is called a bolivar. Slang "bolos"
"Benjamins" or "bucks."
A C-Note
"Sun" is slang for a dollar bill, "moon" is slang for a thousand dollars, and "Pluto" is slang for a billion dollars.