Results for “bonnie lass”
Scottish for pretty, lovely, or good-looking.
A great-looking body — a compliment paid to an attractive person, especially a girl.
Skin so clear, smooth, and dewy it looks like translucent glass.
The backboard — bank shots 'off the glass,' rebounds are 'cleaning the glass.'
A workout plan hitting one muscle group a day — classic gym-bro programming.
Clothes — a classic, slightly retro way to refer to your outfit or wardrobe.
Luxurious, high-class, or fancy — living or acting upscale; from bourgeois.
A well-off, well-dressed man about town, the tango's classic flush gentleman.
Excellent, brilliant, class — Irish for something genuinely great.
Tacky, low-class, or trashy — the Mexican opposite of 'fresa.'
A sexy-secretary corporate aesthetic — pencil skirts, tiny glasses, sharp tailoring, and early-2000s power-dressing.
Jazz-age slang for the coolest, classiest, most wonderful thing going.
Polari for hair — simply 'hair' spelled backwards, a classic back-slang coining.
The classic Jamaican greeting — literally 'what's going on', like 'what's up'.
Money — classic, long-running slang for cash.
A bachelor flat or little love-nest, immortalized in classic tango lyrics.
Sunglasses — Australian (and British) diminutive slang.
'What you doing?' — the classic low-effort opener, often a low-key flirt or boredom check.
Pulled in tight at the waist for a dramatic hourglass — the look is cinched.
A monocle-wearing Pepe emote for a smart, classy, or detective-level observation.
Brilliant, class, or great — Irish for something seriously good.
An upperclassman or senior you look up to — online, the crush or idol whose attention you crave.
Money, cash, paper — a classic West Coast term for the green.
A skill-gap blame — saying one player or side was simply outclassed.
A working-class youth with slicked-back hair, leather jacket, and a love of cars and rock-n-roll.
A scholarly, moody aesthetic of tweed, old libraries, candlelight, classic literature, and gothic university romance.