Etymology
On the American frontier, barrels were employed as desks or tables with which to conduct transactions.
Noun
cash on the barrelhead (uncountable)
- (US, idiomatic) Money in the form of paper currency or coins, paid immediately at the time and place of a transaction: cash only (no credit), and at the point of sale.
1938 September 1, Charles B. Parmer, “Serial Story: Photo Finish—Twelve”, in Telegraph-Herald, Iowa, US, retrieved 23 July 2013, page 11:"[W]e're selling, to the highest bidder, and for cash on the barrel head. . . . Cash in hand, no checks accepted."
- 1947 March 31, Foreign Relations: Potent Weapon, Time:
- [I]n 1946 the U.S. exported $2,166 million worth of food. . . . Most of this ($1,354 million) was paid for, cash on the barrelhead. But $628 million was the U.S. contribution to UNRRA stocks, and $184 million went through Lend-Lease.
2003 February 25, Paul Krugman, “Threats, Promises and Lies”, in New York Times, retrieved 22 July 2013:In return for support of an Iraq invasion, Turkey wanted—and got—immediate aid, cash on the barrelhead, rather than mere assurances about future help.
Translations
Translations
- Russian: де́ньги на бо́чку (dénʹgi na bóčku)
- Spanish: a tocateja (Spain, colloquial; usu. preceded by pagar)
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