Results for “House down boots mama”
An intensifier meaning 'completely' or 'to the max' — she served the house down.
To eat heartily and enthusiastically — really dig into a big meal.
To go all out, give it everything you got, whether on the mic, the floor, or in a battle.
To dance with full energy and joy, especially to funk or disco.
London way of saying 'I swear' or 'on my life' to insist you're telling the truth.
Desperately longing for someone or in a low, pathetic state of wanting — usually romantically.
To dance hard, party with abandon, or fully commit to having a good time.
A change for the worse in looks, style, or vibe — the opposite of a glow up.
The upward or downward angle of your eyes — looksmaxxers obsess over a 'positive' one.
Polari for a toilet, lavatory or house — from Italian 'casa', and the root of Cockney 'khazi'.
A sharp, witty comeback to criticism or an insult — a response that shuts the other person down.
A friendly ghost move, letting someone down gently before quietly fading out.
To calm down, relax, and let go of tension.
To die, or for a machine to break down completely and stop working.
To rap, especially to deliver bars with skill — 'spit a verse' means lay down some rhymes.
A mental breakdown — playful, dramatized Gen-Z shorthand for a stress-out or freakout.
Always ready and down for whatever — no hesitation, on demand.
A snappy way to tell someone to calm down and stop overreacting.
To beg off, make excuses, or back down and apologize.
The day, in the cant — paired against darkmans on the rogue's upside-down clock.
Extremely drunk — one of Ireland's many words for falling-down intoxicated.
Lockdown defense — when you stick to your man so tight he can't breathe.
To tap-dance, to lay down some hot footwork on the floor.
Someone who seeks validation by putting others down and acting "not like the rest" to be chosen.
Home, house, or flat — British and Irish slang for where you live.
Cockney rhyming slang for facts — survives in 'get down to brass tacks'.
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.
A loyal crew member down to put in work — pronounced like 'hitter' without the hard ending.
To sit down and post up somewhere — grab a spot and settle in.
Backing a defender down near the basket — or, in slang, just parking yourself somewhere.
The colder months when single people want to couple up and settle down for the winter.
A figure of authority and admiration — the icon everyone looks up to, or the head of a ballroom house.
A sneak-thief who slipped into houses to steal cloaks and coats off the pegs.
A car stripped down and souped up for speed, the centerpiece of greaser culture.
To drink, in the old cant — and 'bousing ken' was the boozing-house where rogues drank.
Mature content — open to view.
To disrespect or insult someone — a put-down, often in a song.
Explain Like I'm 5 — break it down in dead-simple terms.
Not quite ELI5, but a request for a fairly simple, low-jargon rundown.
A nonsense brainrot catchphrase kids shout while waving both hands up and down like scales.
To weaken something in a game update — the dev's way of toning down an overpowered pick.
A break-boy who lived for the breaks, throwing down on cardboard with footwork and freezes.
Cockney for boots — 'daisy roots' rhymes with boots, clipped to your 'daisies'.
Polari for a house, flat or room — your lattie was your private safe space.
A complete emotional breakdown or reckless meltdown where you snap and stop caring about consequences.