Results for “Lit Situation”
A situation that's lit — any scene that's exciting, hyped, and popping off.
Nadsat for the face, from the Russian 'litso'.
Exciting, fun, and full of energy — a lit party is amazing. (Also: intoxicated.)
A workout plan hitting one muscle group a day — classic gym-bro programming.
To leave or take off — to clear out of a place, fast or casual.
A romantic relationship that's undefined — more than a fling, but without a clear label or commitment.
A Philadelphia all-purpose noun for literally anything — a thing, place, person, or situation.
A chaotic mess that's gone wrong in the usual, expected way — military acronym for 'situation normal, all fouled up.'
'How about you?' — the polite bounce-back that keeps a conversation alive.
Excellent, top quality, the highest grade, flipped from drug slang into pure praise.
A low-stress, decent-paying job with flexible hours and little pressure.
The little sparkles — magic, excitement, or sarcastic emphasis around a word.
The little salute — 'understood, on it,' respect, or playful loyalty.
Hungover — literally 'raw' but means feeling the morning-after pain.
A great situation of comfort, prosperity, and good fortune.
To move around quietly, often up to something or scoping a situation out.
Over-the-top, dramatic, or doing way too much — more than the situation calls for.
Small sneaky acts of emotional infidelity that aren't full cheating but still cross a line.
The rugged little military runabout of WWII — and originally GI slang for any new, untested gadget or recruit.
Mature content — open to view.
To win a near-impossible situation under pressure, especially alone against the odds.
Low-quality, mass-produced content — especially soulless AI-generated images, videos, and text.
Style, charm, or the ability to attract a romantic partner through sheer presence.
A shrug in word form: the situation is bad, you can't change it, so you're done fighting it.
A lifted, elongated, almond eye look — makeup or a literal cosmetic lift.
Cockney back-slang for 'girl' — 'girl' reversed and split to make it speakable.
An aesthetic that romanticizes mushrooms, frogs, mud, and hoarding shiny little treasures like a feral woodland goblin.
Mature content — open to view.
Bad, lame, or low-quality — the opposite of dope.
Excellent, cool, and top-quality — a hip-hop term of high praise.
So deeply into the music or moment that you've left ordinary reality behind — totally absorbed and excellent.
Clipped form of 'elite' meaning highly skilled, and the name of the numbers-for-letters writing style.
A dull, boring, depressing situation or place — a total drag.
Playfully rude or a little indulgent — a 'cheeky pint' or a cheeky comment.
Excellent, fantastic — 'you little ripper!' is pure Aussie joy.
Means 'seriously' or 'for real' — you're not joking even a little.
To throw a big chunk of money into a coin or token fast, with little or no research.
Pure delusional confidence — claiming you'd beat any opponent or situation no matter how hopeless.
In UK slang, unfortunate or a bad situation — though it can also mean the very best in other contexts.
Polari for a gay man — literally 'man-woman', a coded self-name under criminalisation.
A little extra freebie thrown in — Jamaica's version of a bonus or lagniappe.
Northern English for excellent, brilliant, or top quality.
Low-quality, hyper-online content that melts your brain — and the slang it spawns.
Unoriginally mainstream — liking only popular, predictable trends with no individuality.
Mature content — open to view.
The number-spelling of 'leet' (elite) and the name of the whole letter-for-numeral substitution alphabet.
The classic Jamaican greeting — literally 'what's going on', like 'what's up'.
A bachelor flat or little love-nest, immortalized in classic tango lyrics.