Results for “Got A Buzz”
Tango itself, spun through vesre: tan-go flipped into go-tan.
Pleasantly tipsy — feeling alcohol's first warm glow, but not drunk.
A mystical 90s-witchy aesthetic — crescent moons, velvet, crystals, tarot, and a dreamy dark-romantic vibe.
Northern slang for being thrilled, excited, or really happy about something.
Messing about, being silly, or causing harmless mischief.
Flapper slang for plastered, all buzz and no balance.
Lunfardo for a woman or girlfriend, one of the most tango-soaked words in the porteno argot.
Leetspeak for 'you', often paired with taunts like 'j00 got pwned'.
Pleasantly buzzed from drinking — past sober, nowhere near drunk.
Lyrics, especially clever or hard-hitting ones — 'he's got bars.'
To go all out, give it everything you got, whether on the mic, the floor, or in a battle.
Conflict, beef, or a problem with someone — 'who's got smoke?'
Thrills and good times pursued for their own sake — fun, excitement, a buzz.
The invented teen argot of A Clockwork Orange, named from the Russian suffix '-nadtsat' (-teen).
Completely wrong or mistaken, the 1920s way to say you've got it backwards.
To drink before the main event so you arrive already buzzed and save money.
Korean for 'you got this!' — a cheer of encouragement before something tough.
A meetup or hangout — 'we had a linkup' means we got together.
A Prohibition speakeasy dressed up as a sideshow, you paid to see the 'tiger' and got a drink free.
Shouted after a fake-out to mean 'just kidding — gotcha!'
Scottish for going at something full-throttle, with everything you've got.
Modern Cockney rhyming slang for a clue — 'I haven't got a Scooby'.
An ironic motto mocking hustle culture by stacking three buzzwords into a fake life mantra.
A cheeky 80s 'buzz off' — a defiant insult made famous by Bart Simpson.
Short for 'I don't know' — the lazy-thumb way to admit you've got no clue.
A scholarly, moody aesthetic of tweed, old libraries, candlelight, classic literature, and gothic university romance.