Results for “gone country”
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Scouse for something that's gone wrong, weird, or pear-shaped.
Killed, missing, or otherwise done for.
So deeply into the music or moment that you've left ordinary reality behind — totally absorbed and excellent.
Pimp C's name for UGK's slow, gospel-soaked Texas sound.
Leave London to deal drugs in a smaller town.
Armour or shield fully depleted — defence gone.
Exclamation of surprise — Swedish-suburb slang gone global.
Brummie / Black Country for head.
Black Country greeting — 'how are you?'
Black Country for food, especially good food.
Black Country word for sherbet powder.
Left-handed (Brummie/Black Country).
Mild Black Country insult — an idiot.
A daft sod. Black Country insult for a silly person.
Your bits, bobs, knick-knacks and clutter — Black Country for 'stuff'.
A rubbish heap or dustbin — old Black Country word for the midden.
A colliery spoil heap — the pit-waste mounds that scar the Black Country.
Deep-fried pork rind — the Black Country pub snack.
Pork-offal meatballs in onion gravy — Black Country comfort food.
Sweets. The Black Country word for confectionery.
A harmonica. Black Country for mouth organ — literally 'mouth iron'.
Food that's gone off — rancid, manky, in the bin.
Brummie nickname for someone from the Black Country.
Bonfire, in Brummie/Black Country mouths — especially the Guy Fawkes one.
To pester, bother or nag — Brummie/Black Country spelling of 'mither'.
Cockney rhyming slang for wrong — as in 'it's all gone Pete Tong'.
Welsh and West Country word for plimsolls or trainers.
South Wales (and West Country) way of asking 'where are you?'
To squat, crouch or hunker down — Welsh and West Country dialect.
Doric for a townie — said by country folk about city-dwellers, usually with a side-eye.
Dublin word for a culchie — anyone from the countryside.
A narrow rural lane in the Irish countryside.
Houston's Third Ward — Scarface country, Screwed Up territory.
The Massachusetts Turnpike — I-90 to the rest of the country.
Absent Without Leave — gone, with no permission slip.
Store-wide alert that a child has gone missing on the premises.
Dead Right There — the patient is gone before you even unbuckle the gurney.
Gorgeous, lovely, or delicious — a Welsh and West Country favourite.
"You all" — the Southern second-person plural that's gone fully mainstream.
A chaotic mess that's gone wrong in the usual, expected way — military acronym for 'situation normal, all fouled up.'
A tradesperson — sparky, chippy, plumber, the blokes and women who build the country.
Twenties slang for so drunk you've gone stiff as bone.
A romanticized rural-fantasy aesthetic of baking bread, prairie dresses, gardens, and a simple cozy country life.
Manipulating someone into doubting their own memory, perception, or sanity — a therapy-speak term gone mainstream.