Results for “cat eye”
An animated head-bobbing cat emote spammed when the music or vibe is good.
Someone who uses a fake online identity to deceive people, especially in dating — or the act of doing so.
GI slang for the cramped troop transport that hauled men packed in like livestock.
The guys, especially musicians and people who are hip to the scene.
A breezy goodbye meaning 'see you later' or 'until next time.'
The ballroom emcee's call announcing the theme contestants must serve — 'the category is...'
A mantra about staying detached, chasing travel and freedom instead of getting attached.
A teary-eyed cat emote for soft sadness, disappointment, or pity.
A sideways look of suspicion, disapproval, or judgment — often shown with the 👀 emoji.
A composed, stylish, in-the-know man — the very picture of beatnik cool.
A sharp, in-the-know person who's wise to jazz, style, and the latest jive.
A lifted, elongated, almond eye look — makeup or a literal cosmetic lift.
Jazz-age slang for the coolest, classiest, most wonderful thing going.
The gold standard of Twenties praise, the most stylish, splendid thing going.
Roaring Twenties for blind drunk, one of dozens of comic synonyms born under Prohibition.
A fiery, spirited young woman with attitude and energy to spare.
The upward or downward angle of your eyes — looksmaxxers obsess over a 'positive' one.
A ballroom category of high-fashion, over-the-top glamour and extravagance.
A young woman — the beatnik counterpart to calling a guy a 'cat.'
To notice, recognize, or call out something — especially catching what someone's trying to hide.
What's up — the drawn-out 90s greeting Budweiser turned into a national catchphrase.
Mature content — open to view.
Perfectly styled and on point — most famously about eyebrows.
Extremely drunk — one of Ireland's many words for falling-down intoxicated.
The hapless, bumbling soldier who can't catch a break — and any luckless screw-up since.
The messy, flash-photo, hipster party aesthetic of the late 2000s — American Apparel, eyeliner, and disco-grime.
Helping someone lift safely by being ready to catch the weight if they fail.
A device that makes a pistol fire fully automatic — a heavily referenced and illegal modification in drill.
Cockney for eyes — 'mince pies' rhymes with eyes, clipped to your 'minces'.
Mature content — open to view.
'Where you at?' — the locator text when you're waiting on someone or trying to link up.
Top-shelf praise of the Jazz Age, the best of the best, right up there with the cat's meow.
Cockney back-slang for 'woman' — said backwards so the subject didn't catch it.
The single raised eyebrow — skepticism, suspicion, or 'are you serious right now?'
A vibe-first rap style with slurred, hard-to-catch lyrics — often a dig, sometimes just a description.
"As hell" — a texting intensifier (e.g. "tired asl"); not to be confused with the older age/sex/location meaning.
Polari for the eyes, with 'ogles' a pair and 'ogle riahs' the eyelashes.
A ballroom category judged on how convincingly you embody a real-world look or role.
A genuinely great, catchy song — if a track is a bop, it goes hard and you can't stop playing it.
Mature content — open to view.
Cripplingly embarrassed — the Irish go-to for social mortification.
Mature content — open to view.
A treatment that sets your brows brushed-up and fluffy for that fox-eye, model look.
Mature content — open to view.
'What you mean?' — asks for clarification, sometimes with attitude.
In football, to out-jump a defender for a catch right over them — total aerial domination.
An 80s catchphrase asking where the substance is — all sizzle, no steak.
Mature content — open to view.