Results for “Big don”
Something hilarious or a really good joke — a big laugh.
A huge payday — the kind of money that changes your whole situation.
The boss, the head honcho, the most important person in the room.
A playful (or insulting) way to call someone greedy or overweight — often used self-deprecatingly about overeating.
To praise, hype up, or give respect to someone — a shout-out, Jamaican style.
Very angry, often in a way that's funny because the person won't admit it.
A light-hearted British insult for a fool or idiot, usually said with affection.
Skin or nails so dewy and glossy they shine like a fresh glazed donut.
UK street slang for a respected, top-tier person; the boss or main man.
Makeup applied flawlessly and fully — a face that's beat is perfectly done.
To eat heartily and enthusiastically — really dig into a big meal.
The biggest stage at a festival, with the top acts and the wildest production.
Cockney back-slang for 'pound' — the big money, said backwards.
A maximalist glam aesthetic — big fur coats, animal print, gold jewelry, and the energy of a Scorsese mafia matriarch.
An exclamation of shock at a big or attractive backside — basically 'god damn' for a curvy figure.
A phony, untrustworthy person who talks a big game but never backs it up.
To collect a serious amount of money or land a big win.
Muscular and pumped up — looking big and strong from lifting.
A shrug in word form: the situation is bad, you can't change it, so you're done fighting it.
Mature content — open to view.
Completely done for, exhausted, or doomed — also, oddly, having done something brilliant.
London way of saying 'I swear' or 'on my life' to insist you're telling the truth.
Get the money, lock in the win, don't fumble the opportunity in front of you.
Polished, glowy makeup that looks done but not heavy — glam dialed to elegant.
Extremely muscular and ripped — bigger and harder than just fit.
GI slang for any gadget whose name you don't know — the thingamajig of the WWII era.
A big dancehall party or rave — also a term for dancehall music itself.
Mentally checked out — done caring or paying attention.
The numbers or facts don't add up — something is off and doesn't make sense.
Handled, taken care of — 'don't worry, it's all sorted.'
Big money — the more commas in your bank balance, the richer you are.
To throw a big chunk of money into a coin or token fast, with little or no research.
A cute, small art style where characters are drawn with big heads and tiny bodies.
A biscuit (cookie) — and 'big bickies' means a serious amount of money.
To fully focus and grind with total commitment, cutting all distractions to get the job done.
Mature content — open to view.
'Do You Even Lift?' — a meme jab at someone who looks like they don't train.
A crypto scam where developers abandon a project and run off with investors' money.
So funny you're metaphorically dying of laughter — or totally done.
Japanese for 'big brother' — affectionate in anime, but a loaded meme online.
Clothes, in British/London slang — short for garments, usually meaning fly gear.
An Indonesian-origin brainrot character — a wooden log creature with a bat — from the AI meme wave.
The slime-green, messy-confident party aesthetic from Charli XCX's 2024 album — chaotic, hedonistic, unbothered cool.
Your group of male friends or crew — London slang for "the boys" or a wider group of guys.
A big-forehead emote meaning a galaxy-brained, super-smart play or idea.
Visibly outdone in looks or physique by someone standing next to you.
'Don't worry' — the quick reassurance text that smooths things over.
To dance hard, party with abandon, or fully commit to having a good time.