Results for “UK drill”
A video where a host eats large amounts of food on camera while talking to viewers — a huge online genre.
A dark, menacing rap subgenre built on sliding 808s and cold, deadpan flows.
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The smooth pitch-bend of an 808 bass — the production move that defines UK drill.
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UK slang meaning very attractive or, separately, physically muscular.
'I guess' — the lukewarm verbal shrug, or short for Instagram.
Even more impressive, wild, or hard than 'mad' — a top-tier UK hype word.
The police — used in UK road slang and US hip-hop alike.
A fake friend, traitor, or untrustworthy person — UK slang from "pagan."
Money — UK slang, short for "pounds"; "making P's" means making money.
Selling drugs to make money — the grind drill and trap music document.
Flirting with or chatting someone up — UK slang.
Overly sweet, dainty, and quaint to the point of being almost too cute — cardigans, ukuleles, and whimsy.
A cup of tea (UK) or a beer (US) — same word, two very different drinks.
Flashy, expensive designer gear worn loud to flex — UK slang leaning a bit gaudy.
Pointing finger-guns in the air to salute a hard tune — UK rave appreciation.
A device that makes a pistol fire fully automatic — a heavily referenced and illegal modification in drill.
In UK slang, unfortunate or a bad situation — though it can also mean the very best in other contexts.
Internet-ironic term for the cartoonishly menacing, meme-driven side of drill culture.
A practice match between teams, used to drill strats before real competition.
Nadsat for the hand or arm, from the Russian 'ruka'.
A young person, kid, or youth — UK slang from Jamaican Patois.
Valley-girl disgust — 'that's so gross it makes me want to puke.'
A UK insult for a useless, good-for-nothing man who contributes nothing.
A UK term for a streetwise young man tied to road culture; can be respect or mockery.
UK street slang for a disloyal, untrustworthy person, or a fake friend.
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Coded slang for a firearm, especially a long gun — common in drill lyrics to dodge moderation.
Short for a Draco pistol — a popular firearm reference in trap and drill lyrics.
An instrumental or beat — Jamaican-derived word that runs through UK street music.
A friend or mate — UK road slang term of address.
Traitors or untrustworthy people — the plural of paigon in UK road slang.
UK street slang for a respected, top-tier person; the boss or main man.
An insult for someone being an idiot or a menace, common in UK and Irish slang.
The UK street spelling of 'wha gwaan' — a casual 'what's up' greeting.
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