Results for “light blue bandana”
Mature content — open to view.
Slipping light attacks between your abilities to squeeze out extra DPS.
Official group-branded glow stick fans wave at concerts.
The day, in the cant — paired against darkmans on the rogue's upside-down clock.
UK shorthand for lights-and-sirens emergency response.
UK ambulance run on lights and sirens with a hospital pre-alert — time-critical.
Mana-regen and ability-haste buff from the Blue Sentinel jungle camp.
The team in the bottom-left base; gets first pick in the draft.
PUBG's shrinking damage wall that herds everyone in.
Twitter/X verification badge — once a press credential, now a paid status symbol and a slur.
Taunt aimed at a Birmingham City FC supporter.
Mature content — open to view.
An enlisted US Navy sailor below chief — E-6 and down.
Throw hands first, ask questions never.
Steak charred hard on the outside, raw and cool in the middle — Pittsburgh-style.
The extra decorative marker lights bolted all over a show truck.
Jobsite name for the porta-potty — because they're nearly always blue.
Walmart PA code for a bomb threat in the store.
Mass police sick-out used as a back-door strike.
Mature content — open to view.
To make someone doubt their own memory or sanity by twisting the facts on them.
An ironic motto mocking hustle culture by stacking three buzzwords into a fake life mantra.
Manipulating someone into doubting their own memory, perception, or sanity — a therapy-speak term gone mainstream.
A mantra about staying detached, chasing travel and freedom instead of getting attached.
To die in-game. Flat on the floor, lights out.
A go-for-it day — green light from the universe, courtesy of an elderly pug.
Silly, ridiculous, slightly cursed — but said with a smirk.
Good game, well played — the slightly more sincere cousin of GG.
A genderless, slightly-softer respelling of 'bro'.
Birmingham's old red-light district — behind the famous department store.
Delighted — Dublin pronunciation, usually paired with 'excira'.
Rural Irish 'how's it going?' — older, friendlier, slightly farm-coded.
A light-skinned, blond, or white person — Mexican-Spanish nickname.
A naval aviator. From the brown footwear that goes with the flight-crew uniform.
Soldier on the sick list or light duties — a skiver.
Lights On But Nobody Home — patient who looks awake but isn't really there.
Shine a penlight in the mouth and the whole head would glow — patient with very little upstairs.
So buried in orders you can't see daylight.
Touch lightly with heat or seasoning.
Cop car — named for the spinning dome lights on top.
Channellock tongue-and-groove pliers — the blue-handled grippers.
Provider booked for a trip — flights, hotel and days together included.
UK two-tone black-and-white (later blue-and-white) patrol car.
The yellow-and-blue checkerboard livery on UK emergency vehicles.
Police helicopter circling a neighbourhood with spotlight and rotors.
Perfect scores from every judge, the green light to advance to the next round.
Mature content — open to view.
Black-and-blue striped flag with a white centre stripe and red heart, designed by Tony DeBlase, debuted at IML 1989.