Results for “all that and a bag of chips”
Completely wrong or mistaken, the 1920s way to say you've got it backwards.
A swing-music fan or hep jitterbug, often a white enthusiast soaking up Harlem jazz.
Impressive and knowing it — often said sarcastically of someone who thinks they're hot stuff.
Leave it, forget it, or let it go — a plea to drop something.
A Valley-girl insult telling someone to cover their ugly mug with a bag.
Someone relentlessly focused on making money — chasing the bag above all else.
Someone rolling in cash — or the money emoji that flexes it.
The signature Valley-girl filler combo meaning 'absolutely' or 'for sure.'
Real conversation about money — making it, moving it, multiplying it.
The poor soul left holding a worthless investment after everyone else cashed out.
Soft, feminine dance-inspired style — leg warmers, wrap tops, ribbons, ballet flats, and that off-duty dancer look.
To collect a serious amount of money or land a big win.
An accomplice who screens the thief — the body that blocks the view while the foin works.
Someone stuck holding a worthless or crashed asset, left holding the bag while others cashed out.
Polari for legs — the singular 'lally' meaning one leg.
Get the money, lock in the win, don't fumble the opportunity in front of you.
Korean slang for a woman with a baby face but a glamorous, grown-up body.
"You all" — the Southern second-person plural that's gone fully mainstream.
Killing an enemy by shooting straight through a wall or surface.
Go get the money — stop wasting time and chase that paper.
A mild insult for an idiot or fool, borrowed from the Arabic word for 'boy.'
Heads up — there's money to be made right here, right now.
Locked into money mode — focused entirely on getting paid.
A huge payday — the kind of money that changes your whole situation.
A player's full set of moves and skills — their offensive arsenal.
Money — older slang for cash, named for the green color of bills.
To genuinely know what you're talking about — to have real knowledge or taste on a subject.
To spend a large amount of money on something, no flinching.
To go make money or secure a financial win.
Pirated, cracked software distributed illegally, a cornerstone term of old BBS and scene culture.
Total physical and mental exhaustion from prolonged stress, usually work.
An all-out hot-pink, hyper-glam aesthetic inspired by Barbie — head-to-toe fuchsia and unapologetic plastic fantasy.
The breakup letter every soldier dreaded — the homefront sweetheart calling it off while he's away.
Extremely good, usually about food that tastes amazing — 'this food is bussin.'
Money, especially a thick stack of it — getting cake means getting paid.
The clown face that calls someone (often yourself) a fool who made a dumb choice.
A small, chill, low-key gathering — the relaxed opposite of a rager.
A ballroom category of high-fashion, over-the-top glamour and extravagance.
Mature content — open to view.
A Philadelphia all-purpose noun for literally anything — a thing, place, person, or situation.
Hungover — literally 'raw' but means feeling the morning-after pain.
Dressing like a regular British football lad — retro soccer jerseys, trainers, jeans, and a casual everyman swagger.
To eat heartily and enthusiastically — really dig into a big meal.
Northern term for your younger sibling — usually a brother, sometimes any close family.
Flapper slang for plastered, all buzz and no balance.
Clueless, checked out, or not all there — from the "404 Not Found" web error.
When a plan goes wrong — 'it all went pear-shaped.'
Mature content — open to view.