Results for “Read for filth”
To cleverly insult or call out someone's flaws with precision and wit.
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.
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.
Leaving someone on read on purpose, letting the read receipt sit there as a power move.
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.
Patois for 'dirty' — can mean filthy, an insult, or a sick beat that goes hard.
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.