Results for “do you even lift bro”
Polari for pretty, nice or sweet — as in 'your dolly old eek'.
Posing with a dog that isn't yours on dating profiles to seem more lovable and trustworthy.
Take the risk or do the wild thing because it makes a good story — treat your life like a movie.
Suspect, unreliable, or a bit wrong — could be a person, a deal, or your stomach.
Excellent, top quality, the highest grade, flipped from drug slang into pure praise.
Mature content — open to view.
Cockney for telephone — 'dog and bone' rhymes with phone, clipped to the 'dog'.
A light-hearted British insult for a fool or idiot, usually said with affection.
Something dead easy — 'the test was a doddle.'
Money — classic, long-running slang for cash.
Desperately longing for someone or in a low, pathetic state of wanting — usually romantically.
Money, cash — 'I'm saving up some dosh.'
UK street slang for a respected, top-tier person; the boss or main man.
Leaning fully into pessimism, doom, or hopelessness — sometimes as an identity, often half-ironically.
To go all out, give it everything you got, whether on the mic, the floor, or in a battle.
London way of saying 'I swear' or 'on my life' to insist you're telling the truth.
A formative, unavoidable life experience you're not supposed to interfere with — it shapes who you become.
Only do the amount of work your pay actually justifies.
A salon treatment that curls and lifts your natural lashes — no extensions needed.
A treatment that sets your brows brushed-up and fluffy for that fox-eye, model look.
A rhetorical check meaning 'do you understand and agree with this?'
A nonsense brainrot catchphrase kids shout while waving both hands up and down like scales.
A rude raspberry blown to show contempt, named for New York's loudest borough of hecklers.
Hungover — literally 'raw' but means feeling the morning-after pain.
To eat heartily and enthusiastically — really dig into a big meal.
A workout plan hitting one muscle group a day — classic gym-bro programming.
Mexican slang for 'cool,' 'awesome,' or 'sweet.'
To steal — the cant verb that gave us 'shoplifting' centuries on.
Lend me your ears, that is, listen up and pay attention.
An invitation to dance and move your body freely on the floor.
An intensifier meaning 'completely' or 'to the max' — she served the house down.
To dance with full energy and joy, especially to funk or disco.
The stereotypical fitness guy — protein shakes, mirror selfies and 'we go gym' energy.
Skin or nails so dewy and glossy they shine like a fresh glazed donut.
To lose your composure — get wildly excited, blown away, or come unglued.
The male counterpart to a waifu — a fictional man a fan claims as their ideal partner or favorite.
Mature content — open to view.
A Valley-girl insult telling someone to cover their ugly mug with a bag.
Fool or idiot, but also the affectionate 'dude' that glues Argentine conversation together.
To dance hard, party with abandon, or fully commit to having a good time.
To astonish or overwhelm someone, often expanding their awareness.
A change for the worse in looks, style, or vibe — the opposite of a glow up.
Modern Cockney rhyming slang for a clue — 'I haven't got a Scooby'.
A breezy goodbye meaning 'see you later' or 'until next time.'
Cockney for dead — 'brown bread' rhymes with dead, used both literally and as a threat.
A swear-on-it phrase meaning 'I promise, on my brother's life.'
'Do You Even Lift?' — a meme jab at someone who looks like they don't train.
The upward or downward angle of your eyes — looksmaxxers obsess over a 'positive' one.