Results for “Monkey Bar”
Swinging straight from one relationship to the next without ever letting go of a bar.
An all-out hot-pink, hyper-glam aesthetic inspired by Barbie — head-to-toe fuchsia and unapologetic plastic fantasy.
An AI brainrot character that's half crocodile, half bomber plane — a pillar of the Italian brainrot meme.
Mature content — open to view.
Lyrics, especially clever or hard-hitting ones — 'he's got bars.'
Easing into the work week by doing only the essentials on Monday.
Valley-girl disgust — 'that's so gross it makes me want to puke.'
Cockney for hair — 'Barnet Fair' rhymes with hair, clipped to your 'Barnet'.
Hair — cockney rhyming slang from Barnet Fair = hair.
A lot, loads, or very — an intensifier for quantity or degree.
Excessively praising or hyping someone up to an embarrassing, suck-up degree.
Publicly revealed doing something embarrassing, dishonest, or hypocritical.
To rap, especially to deliver bars with skill — 'spit a verse' means lay down some rhymes.
Buying more when the price drops, betting the asset recovers — bargain hunting the red.
To go out partying — to hit bars, clubs, and nightlife for the night.
Nadsat for milk, the drink of choice at the Korova Milk Bar, from Russian 'moloko'.
Tacky, naff, or uncool — cheap and a bit embarrassing.
To publicly call someone out or expose embarrassing details about them.
A self-roasting confession of something embarrassing you actually did — 'not me crying at a commercial.'
Embarrassing or awkward to the point of making you physically recoil.
An illegal Prohibition bar, where the 'juice' flowed despite the law.
Disbelief at someone's nerve — they did something so bold and disrespectful you can barely process it.
Extremely drunk or high — far past tipsy, barely functional.
To excessively praise or hype someone up to an embarrassing, fawning degree.
Cockney back-slang for 'ten' — the top of the coded counting line on a barrow.
A haircut — getting a fresh trim from the barbers is a roadman ritual.
Cripplingly embarrassed — the Irish go-to for social mortification.
Cockney back-slang for 'penny' — the smallest coin, said backwards over the barrow.
A disappointed, side-eyeing emote for cringe, weird, or embarrassing behavior.
A hidden illegal bar of the Prohibition era where you spoke easy to get in.
The face dissolving into a puddle — for embarrassment, dread, or melting from heat or cuteness.
A cheeky 80s 'buzz off' — a defiant insult made famous by Bart Simpson.
The front barrier of a stage — and the prized spot pressed right against it.
To get dunked on so hard the moment becomes a poster — total public embarrassment.