Results for “bro”
A rude raspberry blown to show contempt, named for New York's loudest borough of hecklers.
A workout plan hitting one muscle group a day — classic gym-bro programming.
A treatment that sets your brows brushed-up and fluffy for that fox-eye, model look.
Cockney for dead — 'brown bread' rhymes with dead, used both literally and as a threat.
The stereotypical fitness guy — protein shakes, mirror selfies and 'we go gym' energy.
A swear-on-it phrase meaning 'I promise, on my brother's life.'
Broken, ruined, or knackered — works for machines and humans alike.
Northern term for your younger sibling — usually a brother, sometimes any close family.
Korean for 'older brother' used by men — fandom-speak for the elder male members.
Completely exhausted — or, of an object, worn out and broken.
Colombian slang for 'buddy,' 'bro,' or 'mate.'
Perfectly styled and on point — most famously about eyebrows.
Flat broke — no money until payday.
Korean for 'older brother' used by women — turned into stan-speak for an older male idol.
Japanese for 'big brother' — affectionate in anime, but a loaded meme online.
The single raised eyebrow — skepticism, suspicion, or 'are you serious right now?'
"Brother" or "mate" — a casual British term of address for a friend.
Cheap boxed wine — the silver bladder inside the box, fuel of broke Aussie students.
Mexican 'dude' or 'bro' — also a verbal filler like 'man.'
Prohibition-era nickname for liquor, named for the loose, laughing mood it brought on.
An affectionate term for a close friend or brother, rooted in Jamaican Patois.
London term for 'brother' or 'bro,' borrowed from the Arabic word for brother.
American slang for someone or something lame, broke, or low-effort; the opposite of impressive.
Cockney rhyming slang for skint — totally broke, from 'boracic lint'.
Verlan for 'frere' (brother) — used for a literal brother or, like 'bro', a close friend.
Mature content — open to view.