Results for “dead horse”
Tomato sauce (rhyming slang).
A misfired, returned or no-longer-servable plate.
Running with an empty trailer — moving freight-less miles you don't get paid for.
A brief, deceptive price rebound inside a much bigger downtrend.
Genuine; true; absolutely.
Meat / dead flesh (avoided in Rasta diet)
Lifting a loaded barbell from the floor to a standing lockout.
Excellent, brilliant, class — Irish for something genuinely great.
Means 'seriously' or 'for real' — you're not joking even a little.
So funny you're metaphorically dying of laughter — or totally done.
Brand-new, never-worn gear — especially sneakers still in original condition with the box.
Dublin greeting — 'what's the story, horse?' compressed.
A merry-go-round, specifically the antique one in City Park.
Boston oath — I'm dead serious, on my dead friends.
A bent screw — the guard who runs your contraband.
Mature content — open to view.
Triceps so developed they form a horseshoe shape.
A 1920s cry of 'nonsense!' since horses have no feathers in the first place.
Tapping the opposite move key to stop dead for an accurate shot.
The heroes sitting behind the tanks, deadly at range but soft up close.
A dead-simple fight: tank holds the boss, everyone else hits it.
To resurrect a dead player and get them back in the fight.
A mechanic that wipes the group if anyone's dead or out of place.
Dead air in a fight — the boss is untargetable and you can't deal damage.
Downed into a crawling bleed-out state, not dead yet.
Getting trapped under an enemy's ramps and walls, dead to rights.
Chasing an offstage opponent with a relentless chain of aerials until they're dead.
Silently throttled by the algorithm — no notice, no flag, just dead reach.
Geordie intensifier — very, really, dead.
Geordie for properly — a flat-out intensifier meaning very, totally, dead.
Pit-head winding gear — originally the horse-powered version.
The street. Literally the 'horse road' — the bit where the traffic goes.
An old, knackered horse — a nag, from the Welsh for horse.
Brilliant, deadly, class — Dublin's go-to compliment.
Killing rivals — or symbolically smoking weed strains named after dead ones. Chief Keef coinage.
A bag of weed — or, in drill, a dead rival's body.
The slow, stiff, dead-eyed walk of an inmate doped on heavy antipsychotics.
A deer on the road — alive, dead, or about to be a hood ornament.
Dead Right There — the patient is gone before you even unbuckle the gurney.
UK code for a patient who is obviously, recognisably dead on scene.