Results for “Read Bombing”
To cleverly insult or call out someone's flaws with precision and wit.
Leaving someone on read on purpose, letting the read receipt sit there as a power move.
Clothes — a classic, slightly retro way to refer to your outfit or wardrobe.
Cockney for money — 'bread and honey' rhymes with money, the likely root of 'bread' for cash.
Leading someone on with just enough attention to keep them interested, without real commitment.
Overwhelming someone with affection early on to manipulate or hook them.
Cockney for head — 'loaf of bread' rhymes with head, behind the phrase 'use your loaf'.
Cockney for dead — 'brown bread' rhymes with dead, used both literally and as a threat.
Money, cash, or earnings — the dough you work for.
The breakup letter every soldier dreaded — the homefront sweetheart calling it off while he's away.
'You already know' — an emphatic yes, agreement, or confirmation.
When a man explains something condescendingly, often to a woman who already knows it.
A read on whether a crowd, set or moment has the right energy.
Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt — negativity spread to scare people out of something.
A sandwich, Aussie-style — most iconically a sausage in bread at a Bunnings car park.
Always ready and down for whatever — no hesitation, on demand.
The dreaded workout for legs — and the meme about everyone skipping it.
Helping someone lift safely by being ready to catch the weight if they fail.
I already understand and agree — no need to explain further, I'm on it.
Original Poster — the person who started the thread everyone's replying to.
To drink before the main event so you arrive already buzzed and save money.
Head or brains — from loaf of bread = head; use your loaf means think.
Clothing, your threads or good gear, with roots in a Quechua word.
A romanticized rural-fantasy aesthetic of baking bread, prairie dresses, gardens, and a simple cozy country life.
To ignore someone — leaving them on read or blanking them entirely.
Too long; didn't read — the one-line summary of a wall of text.
The face dissolving into a puddle — for embarrassment, dread, or melting from heat or cuteness.