English edit

Etymology edit

From smackers (money) +‎ -oon (coin, amount) +‎ -y (forming diminutives) but typically only used in the plural. See also smackeroo & ackers.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

smackeroonies pl (normally plural, singular smackeroony or smackeroonie)

  1. (humorous slang) Synonym of smackers: Money or kisses.
    • 1968, Norman Mailer, Miami and the siege of Chicago:
      ...the kind of man who certainly couldn't think much of you if, my goodness, you wouldn't spring ten thousand smackeroonies for a casket.
    • 2000, Gordon Rogoff, Vanishing acts: theater since the sixties:
      It's a comforting fallacy, especially when, as in the case of Iceman, you're about to reach deep into your pocket for a hundred smackeroonies.
    • 2002, Daniel O'Connor, George Plimpton, Iron Mike: A Mike Tyson Reader:
      ...smackeroonies will just keep rolling in for him. This is a man who will make more in a night than Michael Jordan gets paid in a year.
    • 2005, Louise de Teliga, Fashion Slaves:
      "Fifty thousand smackeroonies! I could be out of debt!" She jumped out of bed and did a little jig.
    • 2007, Lucinda Jarrett, Creative Engagement in Palliative Care:
      5FU is cheap, it's abundant, it comes out of the lab quicker than a jackrabbit and it has just earned you 120 smackeroonies at 6-1.

Usage notes edit

Speakers sometimes employ smackeroo as the singular form while treating smackers and smackeroonies as generally plural, although smackeroony is also sometimes used.