Results for “I say again, I spell”
Manc greeting — 'what are you saying?'
Radio proword requesting a repeat of the last transmission.
I already understand and agree — no need to explain further, I'm on it.
Punchline format where the poster makes a wild claim then 'trails off'.
A knife — drill slang named after celeb chef Gordon Ramsay.
An extended stretch without dates, romance, or sex.
Radio proword warning the next word will be spelled phonetically.
Jungler summoner spell that deals true damage to secure big objectives.
Summoner spell that instantly blinks you a short distance.
Black King Bar — the item that makes you immune to enemy spells for a few seconds.
Teleblock — the spell that traps a player in the wild by killing their escape teleport.
A taunt that says the win was easy, spammed after a victory.
A number that says how good you are. Higher is better.
Coy nickname for Twitter, especially post-rebrand when people refuse to say 'X'.
The loose, surreal, anti-joke wing of Twitter built on misspellings and non sequiturs.
Accusation that a chat user is an undercover fed trying to bait you into saying something incriminating.
The canonical 'what the fuck did you just say to me' tough-guy rant pasted at random targets.
Cool, sick, impressive — a respelling of 'tough' used as pure praise.
A genderless, slightly-softer respelling of 'bro'.
Old-school playful misspelling of upvote.
Meme punishment for posting something lustful — Cheems with a bat says BONK, off you go.
'Unjerk' marker — dropping the bit to say something sincere in a circlejerk sub.
Meme misspelling of 'stocks,' used whenever the market makes no sense.
What did you just say? — said with proper Scouse incredulity.
Darlington — the County Durham town, shortened the way locals actually say it.
To pester, bother or nag — Brummie/Black Country spelling of 'mither'.
To say hello — or to acknowledge you know someone.
Chief Keef's way of saying 300 — the Lamron Black Disciples set.
California — the Chicano/Caló way to say it.
Chicano respelling of barrio — claimed turf.
A whole lot — the NOLA spelling of French beaucoup.
NOLA way of saying 'at my house,' calqued from French.
Variant Yat spelling of 'oysters' — same word as ersters.
How locals say Humble, TX — the H is silent.
No. The CB radio way of saying it.
Listening to the CB without saying anything.
Make it exactly as the menu says — no mods, no subs.
The meme farewell from the queen who walked off backwards saying her own name three times.
A disclaimer that what you're about to say is honest truth, not a dig.
A document spelling out a D/s relationship's dynamics, expectations, limits and activities.