Results for “GG go next”
'Good game, easy' — typed after a win to flex and disrespect the losers in one breath.
'Good game' — said at a match's end, sincerely or sarcastically.
Messing about, being silly, or causing harmless mischief.
Visibly outdone in looks or physique by someone standing next to you.
An excited Pepe emote and shout meaning 'awesome' or 'let's go.'
Nadsat for to speak or talk, from the Russian 'govorit'.
Freaking out, overreacting, or acting crazy — your wires are tripping.
A fake friend, traitor, or untrustworthy person — UK slang from "pagan."
The Mexican office-worker stereotype — the corporate nine-to-five drone.
The back seat of a courting couple's car, where a flapper had to 'struggle' to keep things proper.
Mature content — open to view.
Someone who is finished, doomed, or out of options.
Cockney for legs — 'bacon and eggs' rhymes with legs, often a compliment about 'lovely bacons'.
Means the greatest of all time; the highest praise you can give someone or something.
A mystical 90s-witchy aesthetic — crescent moons, velvet, crystals, tarot, and a dreamy dark-romantic vibe.
Always ready and down for whatever — no hesitation, on demand.
A fool or idiot — an affectionately scornful Aussie word for a hopeless dimwit.
An aesthetic that romanticizes mushrooms, frogs, mud, and hoarding shiny little treasures like a feral woodland goblin.
So deeply into the music or moment that you've left ordinary reality behind — totally absorbed and excellent.
Silly, foolish, or behaving in a ridiculous way.
Utterly stunned, like someone smacked you in the mouth with the news.
Tango itself, spun through vesre: tan-go flipped into go-tan.
Dominating someone by being more attractive, taller, or superior — making them look small by comparison.
Wearing technical hiking and outdoor gear as everyday fashion — fleeces, shell jackets, and trail shoes in the city.
Harshly criticised or mocked, especially publicly online.
Greatest Of All Time — the best ever at something.
Embracing being lazy, messy, and self-indulgent with zero shame.
Disrespectful, sly, or taking someone for a fool.
Cockney for a fiver — Lady Godiva rhymes with five-er, so a fiver becomes a 'Lady'.
An extra-emphatic 'da bomb' — the very best, with a 90s flourish.
Cheap boxed wine — the silver bladder inside the box, fuel of broke Aussie students.
Mature content — open to view.
Prohibition-era nickname for liquor, named for the loose, laughing mood it brought on.
Mature content — open to view.
To start dancing, get moving, or do something the right way with energy.
Cockney for neck — 'Gregory Peck' rhymes with neck, clipped to a 'Gregory'.
Sealing your face in a thick occlusive layer overnight for plump, dewy skin.
Set off emotionally — either genuinely distressed or, mockingly, mildly annoyed.
Wordy, pompous, meaningless jargon — coined in 1944 by a fed-up congressman sick of bureaucratic babble.
The ballroom emcee's call announcing the theme contestants must serve — 'the category is...'
So shocked or amazed you're speechless — left gasping by something stunning.
Mature content — open to view.
Connected to the right people — a supplier, the scene, or inside info.
A cigarette — the go-to Aussie word for a ciggie, dart, or rollie.
Swinging straight from one relationship to the next without ever letting go of a bar.
A breezy goodbye meaning 'see you later' or 'until next time.'
Wild, exciting, and amazing — so good it's out of control.
Extremely good, usually about food that tastes amazing — 'this food is bussin.'