Results for “cho mo”
US prison slang for a child molester.
Mature content — open to view.
Mouthy, cheeky, won't shut up — Welsh for gobby.
Arguing or backchatting loudly — running your mouth, Welsh style.
To talk loudly, chatter, or mouth off — Welsh and Midlands dialect.
Rammed, packed, completely full.
To nick something — Geordie for steal.
Brooklyn drill faction and the Woos' arch-rivals — the other half of NYC's drill beef.
Houston DJ technique — slow the track, chop it up.
An automatic rifle, usually an AK-pattern — Southern rap's go-to word for a heavy gun.
Deerskin mittens with a wool liner — Yooper deep-winter kit.
The military dining facility — where troops eat.
British slang for prison, or specifically solitary confinement.
A truck-stop diner with food that earns the name.
A cable sling wrapped round a load to hoist it.
A chocolate biscuit.
Crammed full.
Great, cool, excellent
Really great; excellent
Exclamation of dismissal or mild frustration
Chopped fruit tossed in salt, pepper, and herbs
Chicano gang-style street youth
A lot, loads, plenty (PR)
Very attractive
Completely full or crammed; 'chocka'.
Your single number-one favorite member.
To eat heartily and enthusiastically — really dig into a big meal.
The soldier first in the mess line and last to leave — the unit's bottomless eater.
To blow a winning position because you crumbled under pressure.
An unflattering lookalike — a blend of "chopped" (ugly) and "doppelganger."
Completely full, packed to the brim — whether it's a car park, a fridge, or your belly.
Ugly, busted, or low-quality — a harsh insult for looks, fits, or anything that came out badly.
A ball chopped down that bounces high for an infield hit.
A truancy officer — the bloke who hunts kids skiving off school.
A lazy freeloader who mooches off others.
The signature hooky, repeated move that defines a song's dance.
Old-school ballroom slang for stealing — especially clothes to compete in.
Nadsat for milk, the drink of choice at the Korova Milk Bar, from Russian 'moloko'.
To eat, to chow down, with roots in French/Italian thieves' slang for the mouth.
To talk a lot, to run your mouth or chatter away.