Results for “ice cold”
Covered in diamonds and flashy jewelry — dripping in 'ice' from chains to watch.
Paying a premium for a reserved table and full bottles at a club — flexing money.
Impressively hard, skilful, and ruthless — high praise for a verse or beat.
The euphoric moment your crush, idol, or favorite finally acknowledges you.
An illegal Prohibition bar, where the 'juice' flowed despite the law.
A sexy-secretary corporate aesthetic — pencil skirts, tiny glasses, sharp tailoring, and early-2000s power-dressing.
Kicking back totally relaxed and unbothered, cool with no worries at all.
A long stretch of falling prices and gloom — the cold winter after the bull run.
The clown face that calls someone (often yourself) a fool who made a dumb choice.
A lifestyle of ease, comfort, and minimal stress, by deliberate choice.
Polari for pretty, nice or sweet — as in 'your dolly old eek'.
The police — used in UK road slang and US hip-hop alike.
Cockney back-slang for 'half' — half a coin, half a measure, half the price.
Good, nice, or substantial — and a one-word reply meaning 'great'.
The Mexican office-worker stereotype — the corporate nine-to-five drone.
Buying more when the price drops, betting the asset recovers — bargain hunting the red.
An extended stretch of rising prices and euphoria when everything seems to go up.
To notice, recognize, or call out something — especially catching what someone's trying to hide.
Nadsat for milk, the drink of choice at the Korova Milk Bar, from Russian 'moloko'.
Someone who looks stylish and confident while crushing it at an office job.
An accomplice who screens the thief — the body that blocks the view while the foin works.
Cockney back-slang for 'police' — 'police' spoken roughly backwards so the law wouldn't twig.
Slang for a cold beer.
A rallying cry that a coin's price is about to skyrocket — straight up, no limit.
Nadsat for a razor, the gang's weapon of choice, from the Russian 'britva'.
A cutpurse — the rogue who sliced the strings of a hanging purse and palmed the coin.
Top-tier near-flawless diamonds — the clarity grade rappers name-drop to flex how clean their ice is.
An idiot or fool — but usually said with affection rather than malice.
A service station — the petrol station where you fuel up and grab a dodgy pie.
A device that makes a pistol fire fully automatic — a heavily referenced and illegal modification in drill.
An insulated cooler box for keeping your beers and food cold, the beating heart of any Aussie outing.
A practice match between teams, used to drill strats before real competition.
Geordie/Scottish for nice, good, or — as an adverb — 'quite' / 'fairly'.
A noticeable change in the mood, trend, or cultural feeling of a moment.
A character (or person) who acts cold and hostile but is secretly soft and affectionate.
A summer-only fling that appears with the sun and fades when the weather turns cold.
Cockney rhyming slang for a car — 'nice jam jar, mate'.
A high-ranking officer — the 'brass' whose decisions the enlisted men had to live with.
The colder months when single people want to couple up and settle down for the winter.
The blue, frosty face that means literally freezing — or that something is 'cold' as in impressively ruthless.
The police, or jail itself, a cornerstone of the tango underworld's vocabulary.
Verlan for 'flic' (cop) — the standard banlieue word for a police officer.
Polari for a policeman — literally a 'searching man', the figure most feared by speakers.
GI gallows humor for insects — the bugs and lice that plagued soldiers in the field.
Obvious, exposed, or easily noticed — something so visible it draws attention.
Performed cuteness — the baby voice, finger hearts, and pout idols do on demand.
Public Service Announcement — flagging info you think everyone needs to hear.
A calm, cold, emotionless character who's secretly caring underneath.