Results for “Hard af”
To publicly and unmistakably reveal a relationship online, often after hinting at it for a while.
Trapped at a rank you can't climb out of no matter how much you grind.
To rush in the instant gates open, sprinting to claim the rail or front spot.
Impressive, tough, or excellent — especially music or a look.
Polari for a dull or unavailable man — 'naff' here meaning ordinary, possibly 'not available for...'.
As Far As I Know — a hedge meaning that's true unless I'm missing something.
Cockney for thief — 'tea leaf' rhymes with thief, used to call someone a 'tea leaf'.
Tacky, naff, or uncool — cheap and a bit embarrassing.
Away From Keyboard — you've stepped away and aren't at the screen.
Home, house, or flat — British and Irish slang for where you live.
A chaotic mess that's gone wrong in the usual, expected way — military acronym for 'situation normal, all fouled up.'
Thanks, cool, or all good — a versatile expression of approval.
Head or brains — from loaf of bread = head; use your loaf means think.
Cockney for head — 'loaf of bread' rhymes with head, behind the phrase 'use your loaf'.
A pointless hassle, or the act of fussing about and getting nowhere.
Hits even better in a certain context — a comparative form of something that "slaps."
Scottish for a silly or daft person — gentle and affectionate.
The smaller party that keeps going after the main event ends.
Hard work — usually 'hard yakka', meaning genuine physical graft.
Someone grinding hard at the gym hoping muscle alone will fix their dating life.
Hungover — literally 'raw' but means feeling the morning-after pain.
To overwhelm an enemy with sheer numbers rather than skill, from StarCraft's Zerg race.
Laughing so hard you're metaphorically in tears.
A quiet-luxury aesthetic mimicking inherited wealth — no logos, just polo, loafers, and discreet expensive taste.
"Isn't it" — a British tag used to seek agreement or as a general affirmation.
Even more impressive, wild, or hard than 'mad' — a top-tier UK hype word.
A hip, affectionate way to address a man — the beatnik equivalent of 'man' or 'dude.'
A maximalist glam aesthetic — big fur coats, animal print, gold jewelry, and the energy of a Scorsese mafia matriarch.
The poor soul left holding a worthless investment after everyone else cashed out.
A long stretch of falling prices and gloom — the cold winter after the bull run.
Mature content — open to view.
Lyrics, especially clever or hard-hitting ones — 'he's got bars.'
The intense hunger and snack cravings that hit after smoking weed.
Polari for bad, naff or tacky — the opposite of bona.
When food (or a song) is so good it hits hard — 'this meal slaps.'
'For real' — used to agree hard or to swear you're being dead serious.
Looking after your own wellbeing — from real rest to ironic bad decisions.
Double-verlan of 'arabe' (via 'beur') — a French person of North African/Arab descent.
A light-hearted British insult for a fool or idiot, usually said with affection.
A fool or idiot — an affectionately scornful Aussie word for a hopeless dimwit.
Bitter, annoyed, or resentful — especially after losing or being upset over something small.
Polari for the face — back-slang of 'ecaf', itself 'face' reversed.
Impressively hard, skilful, and ruthless — high praise for a verse or beat.
'Good game, easy' — typed after a win to flex and disrespect the losers in one breath.
Someone obsessively into anime, manga, or games — the original hardcore fan label from Japan.
A smooth, romantic young ladies' man of the 1920s, named after Valentino.
Extremely muscular and ripped — bigger and harder than just fit.
To go for it fully with zero hesitation — commit hard, consequences be damned.