Edge's phrase, from WWE. It basically means "count on it", but since Edge won the "Money in the Bank" match in Wrestlemania 21, he used that title, in conjunction with the aforementioned phrase, thus making, "Bank on it".
Edge starts talking about how he's going to beat someone or get the title, and ends his statement with "BANK ON IT!"
by Durango February 22, 2006
"Man, I need some herb!, let's bank this fool"
"Ah shit, this mo' fucka did not just say that, does leftover have to bank a punk?"
"Ah shit, this mo' fucka did not just say that, does leftover have to bank a punk?"
by Leftover May 23, 2004
by Dixon Hill January 16, 2009
Male Figure Who Is High Up In The Line, Gets Money At Any Measure. Lets Everyone Know He Has Money. Also Involved Helping The Community. Basically A Dirty Successful Gangster That Everybody Knows.
by RideOrDieNigga April 07, 2009
When you are about to have sex, and rather than inserting directly, you first miss and go too high, thereby "banking it in" like a basketball shot.
by SharedSJ February 18, 2009
1: To put money in a bank.
2: To rely on something or someone. (eg: I was banking on this happening).
3: A building where they charge you a fortune for the least little thing (eg: £30 to tell you you're overdrawn). I went in one bank for an international money order. The women who dealt with them (no-one else was allowed the keys to the desk with the IMOs in) had gone to lunch, wouldn't be back for another fifteen minutes. So, after a lot of hanging around the town centre, I went back to the bank only to find they didn't have any remaining IMOs. Given that IMOs are pieces of paper with printed writing on them which the bank sell for £8 each, I'm sure it can't be a case of them not being able to afford more with the profits they make (given that they also employ as few people as possible to keep their profits up). They'll have some more IMOs 'soon'. Whether that means tomorrow, next week, next month or next year I don't know. But you'd think they'd order more IMOs when they're running low on them, not wait until after they've run out.
2: To rely on something or someone. (eg: I was banking on this happening).
3: A building where they charge you a fortune for the least little thing (eg: £30 to tell you you're overdrawn). I went in one bank for an international money order. The women who dealt with them (no-one else was allowed the keys to the desk with the IMOs in) had gone to lunch, wouldn't be back for another fifteen minutes. So, after a lot of hanging around the town centre, I went back to the bank only to find they didn't have any remaining IMOs. Given that IMOs are pieces of paper with printed writing on them which the bank sell for £8 each, I'm sure it can't be a case of them not being able to afford more with the profits they make (given that they also employ as few people as possible to keep their profits up). They'll have some more IMOs 'soon'. Whether that means tomorrow, next week, next month or next year I don't know. But you'd think they'd order more IMOs when they're running low on them, not wait until after they've run out.
by Stormsworder November 15, 2006