Results for “how are ya going”
how are you? (greeting)
Hello, how are you — collapsed into one syllable.
How are you? (greeting).
Hi; how are you?
Rural Irish 'how's it going?' — older, friendlier, slightly farm-coded.
Geordie rallying cry of support, especially for Newcastle United.
A glaring, often comical individual error.
Geordie for 'come on' — encouragement, hurrying, or disbelief.
E-40's nickname for the Bay — yay = cocaine.
To hit a home run.
Brummie smush of 'how are you?'
Bay Area tag for 'you know what I mean?'
Pirated, cracked software distributed illegally, a cornerstone term of old BBS and scene culture.
A supply drop packed with high-tier loot.
Mashing a button at frame disadvantage, praying for a counter-hit.
Slather a photo in beauty filters until the subject is unrecognisable.
Gibberish prank catchphrase from a 2020 TikTok creator.
One heroine, multiple devoted love interests — and she keeps them all.
Iconic broken-English meme line from the 1991 Mega Drive game Zero Wing.
Someone who accidentally argues the exact opposite of what they think they're arguing.
Ironic NFT compliment — pretending a generic JPEG has special traits.
Brummie for mad, daft, a bit cracked.
Brummie nickname for someone from the Black Country.
To get home.
Robbed — stripped of cash, jewellery or pride.
Impromptu East Oakland parking-lot meet — donuts, ghost-rides, street racing.
The thick New Orleans accent — and the people who carry it.
NOLA-speak for 'your mom and the rest of the family'.
Everybody talking at once — overlapping, chaotic, joyful conversation.
Your mother and the whole rest of the family — one mashed-up word.
The whole bundle of New Orleans pronunciations and grammar — 'where y'at?'
Midwest party snack — Chex coated in chocolate, peanut butter, powdered sugar.
Crack cocaine — the white side.
The military dining facility — where troops eat.
A straight-arrow inmate who plays by the rules and stays out of the mix.
A highway mile marker post.
Mature content — open to view.
Mature content — open to view.
Mature content — open to view.
The post-scene wind-down — comfort, reconnection, and checking in once play ends.