Results for “by here”
Right here — Welsh English's way of pointing without lifting a finger.
Welsh-English for 'over there' — pointing-word with extra welly.
NOLA way of saying 'at my house,' calqued from French.
Nosey — sticking your beak where it doesn't belong.
To stop in and visit somewhere, not just walk past it.
Completely calm and unaffected by drama, criticism, or stress.
Celebrity whose famous parents pre-greased the entire career.
Enthusiastic support — you fully endorse it.
A simpleton, a fool.
Standing about gassing won't pay the bills — let's crack on.
South Wales (and West Country) way of asking 'where are you?'
A clue — almost always used in the negative ('I havnae got a scooby').
Someone born at Grady Memorial — an unfakeable ATL birth certificate.
MC T. Tucker & DJ Irv's 1991 single — widely cited as the first true bounce record.
New Orleans for 'how you doing?' — not 'where are you'.
New Orleans-ese for 'at' or 'to' a place, usually someone's house.
An obstetrician — or anyone whose job is catching the kid on the way out.
A rookie cop, fresh out of the academy.
Pulled over and ticketed by a cop.
A dancer still in her first couple of years in the club.
Younger partner in a sugar arrangement who gets money and gifts from a sugar daddy or mommy.
A British police officer.
A UK Special Constable — volunteer with full powers but no pay.
A young or newly-out lesbian still finding her feet.
A young, boyish butch still growing into the role.
Someone newly out as queer.
Cockney rhyming slang for a curry — shortened to 'a ruby'.
The WWII GI's calling card — scrawled graffiti proving 'we were here first,' usually with a long-nosed peeping cartoon.
Hopelessly square, dull, or worthless — going nowhere, leading nowhere.
An 80s catchphrase asking where the substance is — all sizzle, no steak.
Modern Cockney rhyming slang for a clue — 'I haven't got a Scooby'.
To dominate someone else in the looks department just by standing there.
An all-out hot-pink, hyper-glam aesthetic inspired by Barbie — head-to-toe fuchsia and unapologetic plastic fantasy.
Polari for a dull or unavailable man — 'naff' here meaning ordinary, possibly 'not available for...'.
Defusing the bomb undetected while enemies are right there.
Repositioning to another spot when the enemy shows up somewhere else.
Hit by enemy fire, which briefly slows your movement.
Real-time read on where the enemies are and what they're about to do.
The bit after the spike's down, where you fight to defend the detonation.
The spot in the lane where the two creep waves crash and hold position.