Results for “boss man”
Address for a shopkeeper or service worker.
To level up, take control, and improve your status or finances.
The top rank of the canting crew — the boss rogue who lorded it over every lesser vagabond.
An ambitious woman in business — now often used ironically.
An ironic motto mocking hustle culture by stacking three buzzwords into a fake life mantra.
A straight 1v1, toe-to-toe, no kiting, no tricks — just who hits harder.
Exploiting the game's tick timing to fire off actions faster than normal.
A special-move throw that grabs straight through blocking and shields.
Forcing the game's random number generator to give you the outcome you want.
Bending in-game RNG to your will through deliberate inputs.
A hidden final boss that only appears for players good enough to earn it.
The random thing you think about way more often than is reasonable.
Romance subgenre that leans into the taboo — morally grey leads, violence, dubcon, kidnap plots.
On serious terms — no joking, grown-man business.
Them, those guys — third-person plural.
Us, we — first-person plural.
You lot — the plural 'you' in MLE.
Nose.
Hands.
That fella over there — no, he's not actually yours.
Memphis 'man' — pronounced with a curl, used like punctuation.
The one-bar Showboys loop that powers nearly every New Orleans bounce track.
An informal unit of volume — roughly what fit in the giant paper sacks from the old Schwegmann's grocery chain.
The cold station — pantry chef handling salads, charcuterie, terrines.
Liar's Poker nickname for a relentlessly profane Salomon trader.
The person who signals and directs vehicle and crane movements on a construction site.
Plasterer or drywall finisher — the guy slinging joint compound.
When a man explains something condescendingly, often to a woman who already knows it.
The day, in the cant — paired against darkmans on the rogue's upside-down clock.
Disgusting, dirty, or rotten — Irish for properly grim.
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.
Your group of male friends or crew — London slang for "the boys" or a wider group of guys.
That guy — a vague way to refer to a man whose name you won't say or can't recall.
Mexican way to say 'no way' or 'you're kidding' — pure disbelief.
The night, in the cant — when the angler hooked windows and the prig went to work.
The establishment, authority, or oppressive power structure.
UK street slang for a respected, top-tier person; the boss or main man.
A DJ or artist's full performance — the run of tracks they play in their slot.
Polari for a dull or unavailable man — 'naff' here meaning ordinary, possibly 'not available for...'.
Creep Score — how many minions and jungle camps you've killed.
Mana-regen and ability-haste buff from the Blue Sentinel jungle camp.
Dota's big neutral boss who drops the Aegis — a free second life — when he dies.
The Gem of True Sight — a carried item that makes nearby invisible enemies pop into view, permanently.
Your basic attacks, the free swings that don't cost mana.
The jungle monsters and bosses that belong to nobody.
A dead-simple fight: tank holds the boss, everyone else hits it.
The window when the boss is actually hittable — make it count.