Crossword clues for dinero
dinero
- Cash, slangily
- Money, slangily
- Mexican bread
- Money, informally
- It's spent in Mexico
- Cash, in slang
- It's spent in Spain
- Silver coin of Peru
- Barcelona bucks
- Barcelona bread
- Wherewithal, in Oaxaca
- Spend it in Spain
- Spanish moola
- Spanish clams?
- Relative of moola
- Put together, what all those capital gains give you
- Pedro's pesos
- Money, familiarly
- Money in Barcelona
- León bread
- Inedible Mexican bread
- Dough used in a taqueria
- Dough for tortillas?
- Bread for tamales
- Bread for tacos
- Bread for burritos
- Bolivian bucks
- Moolah to Miguel
- Bread for tacos?
- Bread for burritos?
- Bread for tamales?
- Cabbage
- Pesos, e.g
- Lettuce
- Do-re-mi
- Ten-spots and such
- Dough used for tortillas, maybe
- Money, in Mexico
- Scratch
- Informal terms for money
- Southwestern "bread"
- Money, to Juan
- Dough or bread
- Cash for tacos
- Money, in Toledo
- Moola, in Mexico
- Mexican's moola
- Pesos, e.g.
- Criminal ironed what could be laundered in America?
- Racket English men turned round will make cash in NYC
- Money in Mexico
- Long green
- Mexican moolah
- Mexican moola
WordNet
Wikipedia
Dinero is the Spanish word for money, derived from the Arabic dinar, which in turn derived from the Latin denarius. Dinero may also refer to:
- Dinero, Texas, an unincorporated community in eastern Live Oak County, Texas.
- Dinero (cache simulator), a trace-driven uniprocessor cache simulator by Wisconsin UNIV.
- Don Dinero, an American-born Cuban Rap mobster music artist living in Miami, Florida.
- Monte Dinero, a town on the southeastern tip of Patagonia, in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina.
- Spanish dinero, an obsolete Spanish currency.
- Dinero (magazine), a Colombian financial magazine.
Dinero is a uniprocessor CPU cache simulator for memory reference traces written by Dr. Jan Edler and Prof. Mark D. Hill of the University of Wisconsin–Madison. It is frequently used for educational purposes.
Dinero is a Colombian-based monthly business and magazine. Founded in 1993, it is Colombia's first and foremost financial and business-news magazine regularly featuring corporate profiles, market trends, economic analyses, interviews and investigative reports.
Usage examples of "dinero".
Estivez not offer Madre mucho dinero to work for him, I find work in city to support family.
Dona Luz, and the Flowering Wheat Health Food Store in Chamisa-ville, and she raked in the dinero hand over fist.