Derogatory term used not to define but to offend. Yelled at women dressed overly provocatively when they really shouldn't be - ie: when they're older than 25, younger than 16, heavier than 60 kilo's, when their arse is wider than the taxi they just got out of or when the temperature is below 10 degrees celcius.
'Hey dude check out those cheap lookin sluts waitin to get into that club!' 'Slow the car down a bit man and give it a rev.. *yells out of window* TWO BUCKS!' 'You'd want change out of that too man!'
by R Yenarg August 30, 2005

Vulgar, hard hitting cry of exclaimation, typically used within explicit sexual dialogue between males. Also commonly abbreviated to 'GHB'.
by Fockin August 20, 2008

The most kindest, cutest, funniest person ever. He never makes you feel like you're alone, he makes your days bright when they're grey and he's the best boyfriend any girl can ask for.Thank you for being here Cody.
by Heck this January 20, 2018

A coffee bucks is a branch of Starbucks, a worldwide coffee stop. The term coffee bucks was coined by 'Comedy' Dave Vitty to prevent giving undue prominence to Starbucks when discussion coffee on BBC Radio 1.
by Dave Davis the fourth February 24, 2009

From a 1976 speech by Ronald Reagan, who complained of "strapping young bucks" using public assistance to buy T-Bone steaks, the phrase is shorthand for "undeserving and lazy black people living off hardworking white taxpayers instead of getting a job." Many commentators have noted that the phrase originated from the auction block. Now used ironically by liberal commentators to identify racist dog-whistles in conservative argument.
"Whereas once the problem was just welfare queens and strapping young bucks, now it’s the entire middle and lower classes, the lazy union members, the credit card deadbeats, the unemployed so content with their benefits that they don’t look for work."
'We Are All Strapping Young Bucks Now'
Doug J. _Balloon Juice_ January 6, 2011
'We Are All Strapping Young Bucks Now'
Doug J. _Balloon Juice_ January 6, 2011
by Saxifrage2300 January 7, 2012

an uneven exchange or transaction, two bits = 25 cents, four bits = 50 cents, six bits = 75 cents, 8 bits = one dollar. These expressions were used early in the 20th Century to talk about low valued things. Such as "He's got a two bit job."
by Arlan Holt March 29, 2004
