Results for “erb”
Cockney rhyming slang for a cab (taxi).
A driver trawling the streets for a sex worker from behind the wheel.
Marijuana (esp. in Rasta usage)
To joke around, tease, kid (DR)
A short QB run straight ahead behind the line.
A QB dangerous both passing and running.
A match between two local rivals.
An energetic swing dancer, or the wild, acrobatic dance they did to hot jazz.
Verbal version of the F meme — drop it when something dies or flops.
A door latch — and the verb for lifting it.
Geordie for 'to go' — the verb you'll hear stitched into half of Newcastle.
Brummie 'love' or 'hun' — drops into any sentence like a verbal cuddle.
Black Country word for sherbet powder.
To give, send, or burst — all-purpose action verb.
To shake or wobble — Welsh-English verb lifted straight from Welsh siglo.
G Herbo's stretch of S King Drive, named for slain friend Fazon.
Memphis verb — get rowdy, go wild, lose it in the pit.
To spray acid at someone. UK drill's grimmest verb.
Verbal warning shouted when you're passing behind another cook.
A Peterbilt truck — the chrome-laden status symbol of long-haul trucking.
The yellow-and-blue checkerboard livery on UK emergency vehicles.
Doing BDSM together — the community's catch-all verb for engaging in kink.
A waterhole in a dry riverbed.
Marijuana; herb
Marijuana / herb
A water-pipe for smoking herb
A deep discussion / session (often over herb)
To curse someone out; verbally abuse
Chopped fruit tossed in salt, pepper, and herbs
A pungent cilantro-like cooking herb
An aggressive, big-armed, risk-taking quarterback.
Mature content — open to view.
'I guess' — the lukewarm verbal shrug, or short for Instagram.
The name of the cant itself — and a verb meaning to talk — Britain's secret gay language.
Acting wild, going overboard, or behaving unreasonably.
To steal — the cant verb that gave us 'shoplifting' centuries on.
A kill in a shooter — and, as a verb, to rack them up.
Geordie/Scottish for nice, good, or — as an adverb — 'quite' / 'fairly'.
Polari for to look at or to see — the verb of the discreet, knowing glance.
Mexican 'dude' or 'bro' — also a verbal filler like 'man.'