The Federal Reserve this week is rolling out new benjamins as part of its continuing efforts to stay ahead of cheaters.
But I want to see the school, and meet your pals, and get acquainted with the benjamins.
The benjamins joined them at this point, so conversation became general.
Two by two they marched dumbly behind the benjamins and the Bryces.
The light broke upon the benjamins, but they tried not to smile at each other.
It was the skirmishers of Hoods division that so nearly caught benjamins guns.
The column now advanced, benjamins guns firing shells into the woods in front.
The Mopuses and benjamins were more familiar than they would be with a really great lady.
Had they both been benjamins they could not have had more abundant platefuls than she gave them that day.
The benjamins had duties to attend to, so Wally and his daughter were left alone for a quarter of an hour, in the library.
masc. proper name, in Old Testament, Jacob's youngest son (Gen. xxxv:18), from Hebrew Binyamin, literally "son of the south," though interpreted in Genesis as "son of the right hand," from ben "son of" + yamin "right hand," also "south" (in an East-oriented culture). Cf. Arabic cognate yaman "right hand, right side, south;" yamana "he was happy," literally "he turned to the right." The right was regarded as auspicious (see left and dexterity). Also see Yemen, southpaw, and cf. deasil "rightwise, turned toward the right," from Gaelic deiseil "toward the south; toward the right," from deas "right, right-hand; south." Also cf. Sanskrit dakshina "right; south." Slang meaning "money" (by 1999) is from portrait of Benjamin Franklin on U.S. $100 bill.
noun
A hundred-dollar bill
[fr Benjamin Franklin's image on the bill]