Results for “cheese on bread”
A mild Bajan exclamation of surprise or dismay.
Cockney rhyming slang for the missus (wife).
Money, plain and simple — the cheddar, the paper, the cash.
Your character's go-to combo — reliable, easy, the one you'll do a thousand times.
Buttered white bread covered in sprinkles.
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.
Cockney for head — 'loaf of bread' rhymes with head, behind the phrase 'use your loaf'.
The boss, the head honcho, the most important person in the room.
Cockney for dead — 'brown bread' rhymes with dead, used both literally and as a threat.
Money, cash, or earnings — the dough you work for.
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.
The boss. The top dog. The big cheese.
A sandwich — or anything between two bits of bread.
Showing off the jewelry, the car, the bread — loud and unbothered.
NOLA's signature sandwich on crackly Leidenheimer French bread.
Detroit coney-shop question: Cheez Whiz from the bottle or American slices on your chili-cheese fries?
Homemade prison hooch fermented from fruit, sugar and bread.
A fundraising barbecue of sausages in bread.
A flat cassava flatbread/pancake
Curried chickpeas served between two fried flatbreads.
A fried or baked flatbread, often split for fillings.
A flatbread, or a wrap filled with curry
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.