Results for “dead lift”
Lifting a loaded barbell from the floor to a standing lockout.
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.
Tomato sauce (rhyming slang).
Genuine; true; absolutely.
Meat / dead flesh (avoided in Rasta diet)
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.
Boston oath — I'm dead serious, on my dead friends.
Mature content — open to view.
Mocking challenge to someone's lifting credibility.
Lifting too heavy to impress people, with bad form.
To steal — the cant verb that gave us 'shoplifting' centuries on.
A salon treatment that curls and lifts your natural lashes — no extensions needed.
A hexagonal bar you stand inside to deadlift.
Dead lazy, won't lift a finger (Cuba)
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.
Dramatic comeback line lifted from Michael Jordan's documentary, deployed for petty grudges.
A door latch — and the verb for lifting it.
Geordie intensifier — very, really, dead.
Geordie for properly — a flat-out intensifier meaning very, totally, dead.
To scrounge, beg, or blag — usually for tabs, lifts or a pint.
To shake or wobble — Welsh-English verb lifted straight from Welsh siglo.
Right here — Welsh English's way of pointing without lifting a finger.
A lift on the back of someone's bike.
A lift on the back of someone's bike.
Brilliant, deadly, class — Dublin's go-to compliment.
Chief Keef's alias, lifted from the Scarface drug lord Alejandro Sosa.