Results for “chi chi man”
A young woman — the beatnik counterpart to calling a guy a 'cat.'
The little bit of life you lose blocking specials and supers — death by a thousand pokes.
Jumping to block in the air instead of on the ground in air-block games — the coward's defence.
Reversing your opponent's reversal, the ultimate 'I knew you knew' read.
To flirt with someone — chat them up.
To stab someone — or the blade you do it with.
Dublin word for a child.
Chicago, nicknamed after Iraq for its body count.
Chicago — the long-running nickname that drill rappers inherited and never let go.
Chicago — drill-era variant of Chi-Town.
A formal written request for anything official in the military.
What Aussie crims are made to call the screws.
Truck weigh station — where the rigs get penned up and checked.
A driver running a chromed-out show truck — often the kind that hauls live poultry.
The extra decorative marker lights bolted all over a show truck.
A jaw-style clamp for pulling wire and cable under heavy tension.
A woven-mesh cable grip that tightens its hold the harder you pull.
The younger members of a ballroom house — the offspring of its mother and father.
The mentored members of a ballroom house, parented by its mother and father.
A chat or gossip.
An insulated cooler box for drinks and food
Hot chips / fries (or fish and chips)
To shuffle-walk in rhythm behind a band at Carnival.
Tiny; a very small amount.
Skinny, underdeveloped legs on a bigger upper body.
Damn! / shoot! (mild)
A person from Mexico City
Mature content — open to view.
Mature content — open to view.
A bicycle (Cuba)
Chilling and relaxing, super laid-back (DR)
Placeholder — see 'estar cañón'.
To chill, to hang out.
Little one, tiny tot.
A pitch thrown high and inside to back a batter off.
Mexican slang for 'cool,' 'awesome,' or 'sweet.'
Mature content — open to view.
Flirting with or chatting someone up — UK slang.
A cute, small art style where characters are drawn with big heads and tiny bodies.
Cockney for mate — 'china plate' rhymes with mate, clipped to 'me old china'.