Results for “Adam 'n' Eve it”
Cockney rhyming slang for believe — 'would you Adam and Eve it?'
Honest, fair, and on the up-and-up, no tricks, no double-dealing.
A formative, unavoidable life experience you're not supposed to interfere with — it shapes who you become.
A nonsense brainrot catchphrase kids shout while waving both hands up and down like scales.
A dismissive 'I don't care' delivered with maximum attitude.
The breakup letter every soldier dreaded — the homefront sweetheart calling it off while he's away.
A party where everyone dances to music through wireless headphones, not speakers.
Dressing like a regular British football lad — retro soccer jerseys, trainers, jeans, and a casual everyman swagger.
To make money and provide — everybody at the table getting fed.
To publicly and unmistakably reveal a relationship online, often after hinting at it for a while.
Even more impressive, wild, or hard than 'mad' — a top-tier UK hype word.
Your ranked roster of favorites across every group you stan.
Publicly revealed doing something embarrassing, dishonest, or hypocritical.
The phase where you hint at something new (a relationship, project, or self-reinvention) without fully revealing it.
To ambush an enemy by surprise, usually ganging up several-on-one.
So in love or devoted to a partner that you do whatever they want.
The poor soul left holding a worthless investment after everyone else cashed out.
A phony, untrustworthy person who talks a big game but never backs it up.
Lyrics, especially clever or hard-hitting ones — 'he's got bars.'
Always ready and down for whatever — no hesitation, on demand.
Polari and wider British slang for a drink, usually alcoholic — short for 'beverage'.
The backstory, history, or collection of events that explain a person, community, joke, or fictional world.
Gossip, the latest news, or the truth — 'spill the tea' means tell me everything.
To hold a coin no matter what, never selling through any crash — born from a famous typo.
To go all out, give it everything you got, whether on the mic, the floor, or in a battle.
An extended stretch of rising prices and euphoria when everything seems to go up.
Cockney back-slang for 'girl' — 'girl' reversed and split to make it speakable.
A lot, very, or really — the all-purpose Aussie intensifier for everything.
The dreaded workout for legs — and the meme about everyone skipping it.
The top rank of the canting crew — the boss rogue who lorded it over every lesser vagabond.
Polari for the face — back-slang of 'ecaf', itself 'face' reversed.
Insanely good at a game — playing at a level that seems almost unfair.
The delay between your action and the game responding — the bane of every online player.
To hint at something (often a new relationship) subtly online before officially revealing it.
A dream piece you've been hunting forever — the holy-grail item of your collection.
A sudden, irreversible turn-off toward someone you were into.
To cleverly insult or call out someone's flaws with precision and wit.
Butchers' back-slang for 'pork' — 'pork' reversed and softened on the block.
Just right, smooth and satisfying, everything as it ought to be.
Mature content — open to view.
Means 'seriously' or 'for real' — you're not joking even a little.
The afternoon — peak example of Aussies shortening everything with an -o.
A phase of dieting down to lose fat and reveal the muscle you built.
To eat, to chow down, with roots in French/Italian thieves' slang for the mouth.
Wearing technical hiking and outdoor gear as everyday fashion — fleeces, shell jackets, and trail shoes in the city.
To level up, take control, and improve your status or finances.
The chaotic crowd zone where everyone slams together — now huge in rap shows too.
'Do You Even Lift?' — a meme jab at someone who looks like they don't train.