Results for “bread n butter”
Your character's go-to combo — reliable, easy, the one you'll do a thousand times.
Cockney for money — 'bread and honey' rhymes with money, the likely root of 'bread' for cash.
Leading someone on with just enough attention to keep them interested, without real commitment.
Money, cash, or earnings — the dough you work for.
Ugly. Rough-looking. The opposite of peng.
A brand-new second lieutenant, named for the single gold bar on the collar.
Mortar — specifically the dollop a bricklayer spreads on a brick before setting it.
Cockney for head — 'loaf of bread' rhymes with head, behind the phrase 'use your loaf'.
Cockney for dead — 'brown bread' rhymes with dead, used both literally and as a threat.
A fast sweeping low that's the bread and butter of every Mishima mixup.
Big flat round Tyneside bread loaf — a Geordie staple.
A crusty bread roll — the Midlands name for what others call a bap or barm.
A bread roll. Don't call it a bap.
A sandwich — or anything between two bits of bread.
Smooth-talking flattery; buttering someone up.
Showing off the jewelry, the car, the bread — loud and unbothered.
NOLA's signature sandwich on crackly Leidenheimer French bread.
A peanut butter and Marshmallow Fluff sandwich, the official sandwich of Massachusetts.
Detroit's devil's food cake with buttercream 'bumps' under a chocolate ganache shell.
Midwest party snack — Chex coated in chocolate, peanut butter, powdered sugar.
Homemade prison hooch fermented from fruit, sugar and bread.
The early-2000s aesthetic revival — low-rise jeans, baby tees, butterfly clips, and shiny futuristic chrome.
A sandwich, Aussie-style — most iconically a sausage in bread at a Bunnings car park.
Head or brains — from loaf of bread = head; use your loaf means think.
A romanticized rural-fantasy aesthetic of baking bread, prairie dresses, gardens, and a simple cozy country life.