Results for “don't let the door hitcha where the good Lord splitcha”
A pointed way of saying "get out."
Don't rely on what hasn't happened yet.
Has no common sense whatsoever.
Utterly broke.
Don't provoke someone easily angered.
Shut the door; you're wasting the AC or heat.
Sneaking into the enemy base to smash objectives while they're busy elsewhere.
The off-licence — where you nip out to grab a few cans.
Ready at the cell door to be let out.
A one-sided dynamic where only one person is allowed to reach out.
Completely useless.
'Are you okay?' or 'don't worry about it'
A farewell that drags on for another hour of doorway chatter.
Step back and let someone do their thing — they're in the zone and about to cook up something good.
Queue for a random instance and take whatever the game throws at you.
A bullet an enemy fires at you the moment it dies.
Killing an enemy wipes its on-screen bullets — often turning them into points.
Crying Isaac emote — pure sadness.
A devastating reply telling someone their tweet was so bad they should quit the platform.
Geordie for a boiled sweet — confectionery, not ammunition.
A crumpet — what the West Midlands calls them.
To say hello — or to acknowledge you know someone.
Clue — usually as in 'haven't got a Duncan'.
South Wales (and West Country) way of asking 'where are you?'
Mortified. Cringing-into-the-floor embarrassed.
MC T. Tucker & DJ Irv's 1991 single — widely cited as the first true bounce record.
New Orleans for 'how you doing?' — not 'where are you'.
Yat pronunciation of 'toilet,' straight outta New Orleans.
Round Sicilian sandwich stacked with cold cuts and olive salad.
Lean. Codeine-promethazine syrup in a styrofoam double cup.
Paradox Boston-speak for 'so do I' — somehow agreeing by negating.
Michigan word for a sliding glass patio door.
Mature content — open to view.
Old-school CB term for a fellow trucker — but the meaning flipped.
The lead truck in a convoy scouting for cops ahead.
The rear truck in a convoy watching for cops coming up behind.
Well done; good for you.
Really good.
Reliable information; the truth.
Well done, friend.