Results for “bru”
Map bushes that hide you from sight, prime ambush spots.
A sawn-off shotgun — Jamaican patois that crossed into UK drill.
A wild horse.
Amazing, excellent — the highest compliment (PR)
An inside pitch meant to push a batter back.
"Brother" or "mate" — a casual British term of address for a friend.
Confusion emote — often dropped when something on stream sounds racist.
Romance-novel hero archetype: older, distinguished, commanding — but the kind who'd order for the table and fix your problems.
Asking for trouble — headed straight toward a beating or serious consequences.
Faking out an enemy, weaving through brush or fog to dodge or lose them.
Pumping continues to brute-force your way to the ending instead of one-crediting it.
Brutal reply telling someone they used to be good and aren't anymore.
Brummie gold standard — means brilliant, excellent, top-tier.
Brummie for mad, daft, a bit cracked.
A forward roll — Brummie kids don't do somersaults, they do gambols.
Brummie term of affection for your sister — not what it sounds like down south.
Brummie 'love' or 'hun' — drops into any sentence like a verbal cuddle.
A roundabout — Brummies call traffic islands, well, islands.
A drain or sewer, Brummie style.
Up the canal — Brummie for a walk along the waterway.
Brummie for hands, usually big rough ones.
Brummie / Black Country for head.
Brummie smush of 'how are you?'
Brummie goodbye — 'ta-ra a bit', see you soon.
Left-handed (Brummie/Black Country).
Brummie nickname for someone from the Black Country.
Cheap frozen cordial lollies in a long plastic tube — peak Brummie corner-shop nostalgia.
Birmingham's brutal hide-and-seek variant — find the safe zone before 'it' shouts your name.
Bonfire, in Brummie/Black Country mouths — especially the Guy Fawkes one.
To worry, fret or fuss — the Brummie pronunciation of 'worry'.
To pester, bother or nag — Brummie/Black Country spelling of 'mither'.
"Unexplained Beer Injury" — the mystery bruise the drunk patient can't account for.
JPMorgan trader Bruno Iksil, whose oversized CDS book blew up for over $6bn.
Full of alcohol, or describing a fun drink-heavy occasion — a boozy brunch.
Censored slang for women/girls, part of the joke '-uzz' family alongside bruzz and chuzz.
Flapper brush-off meaning no more kissing or canoodling tonight, fella.
A treatment that sets your brows brushed-up and fluffy for that fox-eye, model look.
Holding an asset through brutal crashes without selling — nerves of steel, hands of diamond.
Mature content — open to view.