Results for “leh we”
Let's go
A circle on the ground someone has to stand in, or 'soak', to defuse it.
Slipping light attacks between your abilities to squeeze out extra DPS.
A wildly tryhard player who plays every casual match like a grand final.
A fast sweeping low that's the bread and butter of every Mishima mixup.
The part of a move's hitbox that hits hardest — the spot you actually want to land.
Acting unhinged or talking pure nonsense.
Posting about someone without naming them so they have to wonder if it's about them.
Retweeting someone with your own commentary stapled on top — the dunk delivery system.
The loose, surreal, anti-joke wing of Twitter built on misspellings and non sequiturs.
Collective noun for Twitter users — the people of the timeline.
Go on / go ahead — Scouse encouragement.
To dodge something — a plan, a person, a pint you don't want.
Scouse for something that's gone wrong, weird, or pear-shaped.
Emphatic yes. The Geordie 'of course, mate'.
Brummie term of affection for your sister — not what it sounds like down south.
To worry, fret or fuss — the Brummie pronunciation of 'worry'.
Soft, weak, embarrassing — has no bottle.
To stab someone — drill-era word for it.
Cockney rhyming slang for a coat.
A Glaswegian. Person from Glasgow.
Lemon-pepper wings tossed in hot sauce — ATL's signature wing order.
That's outrageous — in the best way.
Mature content — open to view.
Houston DJ technique — slow the track, chop it up.
Houston alt-name for chopped and screwed.
Hip-popping, ass-shaking dance born out of New Orleans bounce.
A Mardi Gras club that throws a parade or ball.
Memphis BBQ shorthand — sauced ribs or rub-only ribs.
The August week Memphis fills with Elvis fans marking the anniversary of his death.
An informal unit of volume — roughly what fit in the giant paper sacks from the old Schwegmann's grocery chain.
Across the Mississippi from NOLA proper — Algiers, Gretna, Marrero, Harvey.
Wasted on lean — or, depending on tone, just incredibly cool.
When a too-tall U-Haul gets its roof peeled off by a Storrow Drive bridge.
Stabbing or killing in UK drill — drawing blood.
A knife in UK drill — the thing that gets you wet.
Slashed or stabbed — UK drill onomatopoeia for the sound of a blade.
Inflatable life-jacket — named for the curves.
A submariner — someone who serves on subs.
Drinks — especially hot ones like brews of tea.