Results for “abo”
Exclamation of surprise — Swedish-suburb slang gone global.
Down in the dumps. Glum-faced.
Nadsat for an old woman, from the Russian 'babushka' (grandmother).
The invisible effort of managing feelings and relationships — usually unthanked.
Cockney back-slang for 'tobacco' — 'tobacco' reversed for a quiet smoke or a quiet deal.
'How about you?' — the polite bounce-back that keeps a conversation alive.
Real-time read on where the enemies are and what they're about to do.
A low-level character decked out in gear way above its level.
Tongue-in-cheek job claim used to dodge questions about your real one.
Stealing something — usually from school — and bragging about it on TikTok.
The random thing you think about way more often than is reasonable.
Posting about someone without naming them so they have to wonder if it's about them.
Catchphrase mocking the tech-server poster who can't shut up about running a hard Linux distro.
That emotional fog after finishing a great book — can't start a new one, can't stop thinking about the last one.
Romance subgenre that leans into the taboo — morally grey leads, violence, dubcon, kidnap plots.
Today I F***ed Up — a confession post about a recent personal disaster.
The guy who won't shut up about his bags at a wedding.
A permabull who thinks every coin is about to 100x.
Sarcastic 'sure, totally trustworthy' — usually said about an obvious scam.
A roundabout — Brummies call traffic islands, well, islands.
A meadow. A grassy field for cows, kids or kicking a ball about.
Standing about gassing won't pay the bills — let's crack on.
'Hark at you' — Welsh sarcasm for someone getting above their station.
Doric for a townie — said by country folk about city-dwellers, usually with a side-eye.
Dundonian word for a roundabout.
That spinning, clammy, about-to-boak feeling after too much.
Be on your guard — keep your wits about you.
Your da — or some older bloke you're talking about.
'The hell are you talking about?' — slurred into one word.
'What are you talking about' — slurred and dropped into conversation.
Trap subgenre where the bars are about credit-card fraud and digital scams.
Southern American English for 'about to' — on the verge of doing something.
Mardi Gras Indians — Black NOLA tribes who mask in elaborate hand-sewn suits.
About to swing by — Houston cruising vocabulary.
Dallas tag phrase — 'know what I'm talking about?'
Massachusetts for a roundabout.
A city dweller who shows up to a small town clueless about how things work.
A dispute, a dramatic mess, a piece of beef worth talking about.
First-time mum who keeps showing up sure she's in labour. She isn't.
Getting a ticket — or speeding hard enough you're about to.
A deer on the road — alive, dead, or about to be a hood ornament.
Trading ahead of a client's order you know is about to move the price.
A manual labourer, especially on heavy excavation or groundworks.
Foreman in charge of a gang of labourers.
A porta-potty. The 'honey' is a polite lie about what's inside.
Fake sugar daddy who lies about wealth and stiffs the baby on her allowance.
The patient who's obviously, visibly, no-questions-about-it dying.
Extremely good, usually about food that tastes amazing — 'this food is bussin.'