Results for “le dollar bean (algospeak family)”
Step back and let someone do their thing — they're in the zone and about to cook up something good.
The dreaded workout for legs — and the meme about everyone skipping it.
Clipped form of 'elite' meaning highly skilled, and the name of the numbers-for-letters writing style.
A warm compliment for someone who did something great or is just brilliant; a top person.
Cash money — green like a head of lettuce.
Nadsat for people, from the Russian 'lyudi'.
Let someone do their thing without interrupting — they're in a flow and might create something great.
Mature content — open to view.
A ballroom category of high-fashion, over-the-top glamour and extravagance.
A sleeping-streamer emote for boring, slow, or sleep-inducing stream moments.
A party where everyone dances to music through wireless headphones, not speakers.
Flapper slang for plastered, all buzz and no balance.
Mexican all-purpose 'alright,' 'wow,' 'come on,' or 'let's go.'
Cockney for thief — 'tea leaf' rhymes with thief, used to call someone a 'tea leaf'.
Cockney rhyming slang for a suit — shortened to 'whistle'.
Flapper-era way to call something nonsense, like saying 'baloney' or 'bunk.'
Did something flawlessly and completely — absolutely nailed it with nothing left to criticize.
Underrated or overlooked — not getting the attention it deserves.
Verlan for 'metro' — the underground/subway, a daily-life banlieue word.
Honest, fair, and on the up-and-up, no tricks, no double-dealing.
The back seat of a courting couple's car, where a flapper had to 'struggle' to keep things proper.
The minimalist aesthetic of slick bun, dewy skin, gold hoops, and 'no-makeup' makeup.
A sharp, minimal, well-put-together outfit — nothing flashy, just crisp pieces that quietly look expensive.
Soft, feminine dance-inspired style — leg warmers, wrap tops, ribbons, ballet flats, and that off-duty dancer look.
Muscular and pumped up — looking big and strong from lifting.
Cockney for wife — 'trouble and strife' rhymes with wife, clipped to 'the trouble'.
A money-making gig you do alongside your main job.
Paying a premium for a reserved table and full bottles at a club — flexing money.
To beg off, make excuses, or back down and apologize.
A liquor store — the bottle shop where Aussies stock up on grog.
An AI-generated brainrot character — a shark in sneakers — and a flagship of the 'Italian brainrot' wave.
Mature content — open to view.
Mexican 'okay,' 'sounds good,' or 'deal.'
Perfectly styled and on point — most famously about eyebrows.
The ultimate — the absolute end of the line in the best possible way.
GI slang for the cramped troop transport that hauled men packed in like livestock.
A dull, boring, depressing situation or place — a total drag.
A crossover so nasty the defender slips, stumbles, or falls trying to keep up.
Sharp, crisp, and well put-together — a fit with no clutter and zero flaws.
The messy, flash-photo, hipster party aesthetic of the late 2000s — American Apparel, eyeliner, and disco-grime.
Something so good it knocks you out, the absolute height of excellence.
Something dead easy — 'the test was a doddle.'
Mature content — open to view.
Courage or nerve — "having bottle" means being brave; "losing your bottle" means chickening out.
I already understand and agree — no need to explain further, I'm on it.
Something hilarious or a really good joke — a big laugh.
An aesthetic obsessed with spotless, organized, satisfying tidiness — fresh laundry, neat shelves, and order.
A sarcastic response to someone bragging about something strange or unimpressive.