Results for “fed the bear”
Chat shorthand for a suspected government agent or informant — the plain-English cousin of glowie.
The police — used in UK road slang and US hip-hop alike.
Stock chat insult for the unkempt, smug, fedora-tipping nerd archetype.
WSB insult for anyone shorting or betting on a stock falling.
Stabbed up — knife work, drill-scene shorthand.
Got no tip.
Any cop, on or off the highway.
A speeding ticket handed out by the cops.
The police station — where the bears den up.
A cop watching traffic from a plane or chopper.
A speed-radar trap set up by the cops.
A cop who's listening to the CB channel.
A rookie cop, fresh out of the academy.
A female police officer.
A male cop, or a senior officer on the road.
A state trooper — the apex predator of the highway.
Getting a ticket — or speeding hard enough you're about to.
Pulled over and ticketed by a cop.
A speeding four-wheeler ahead of you who'll get pulled over first.
A long stretch of falling prices and gloom — the cold winter after the bull run.
Really pleased or proud about something.
Mildly annoyed or put out — irritated, not furious.
A fiery, spirited young woman with attitude and energy to spare.
Killing a fed enemy on a streak and claiming the bounty gold their lead has piled up.
A Balance druid in their big angry owl-bear form.
Accusation that a chat user is an undercover fed trying to bait you into saying something incriminating.
A sentence deliberately stuffed with every Gen-Alpha brainrot term at once, weaponised for maximum cringe.
Fed up to the back teeth, sick of something, completely done with it.
A drum-fed gun — name's the sound of the mag thumping.
Caught by police — cuffed and processed.
The feds. The police.
Standard-issue field load-bearing kit — pack, belt, pouches, the lot.
A state trooper, named for the hat that looks like Smokey Bear's.
To make money and provide — everybody at the table getting fed.
Bitterly disappointed or devastated — the opposite of chuffed.
'At this point' — the lead-in for a resigned or fed-up conclusion.
Wordy, pompous, meaningless jargon — coined in 1944 by a fed-up congressman sick of bureaucratic babble.