Results for “mi pana”
Small sneaky acts of emotional infidelity that aren't full cheating but still cross a line.
Lunfardo for a woman or girlfriend, one of the most tango-soaked words in the porteno argot.
Mediocre, average, or overhyped — a dismissive verdict on an anime, show, or anything else.
Cockney for eyes — 'mince pies' rhymes with eyes, clipped to your 'minces'.
Northern English for excellent, brilliant, or top quality.
Admiring someone's physique — short for 'admiring,' usually about gains.
Scottish/northern for disgusting, gross, or ugly.
Mildly annoyed or put out — irritated, not furious.
Caribbean and South American slang for 'buddy,' 'homie,' or close friend.
Polari for a dull or unavailable man — 'naff' here meaning ordinary, possibly 'not available for...'.
An explosive shout of excitement meaning something is fantastic or thrilling.
We're all gonna make it — a hype mantra of solidarity and shared optimism.
In Case You Missed It — resurfacing something you might've scrolled past.
Polari for a man — from Italian 'uomo', and the root of many compound terms.
Joke term for the panic of having nothing good to wear despite a full wardrobe.
Reacting to something shocking or hilarious as if you're yelling out loud.
Someone with mainstream tastes who isn't deep into a niche, internet, or subculture.
Easing into the work week by doing only the essentials on Monday.
Polari for a gay man — literally 'man-woman', a coded self-name under criminalisation.
Doing something deliberately cool to rack up "aura" (coolness points) — often posing or performing for the effect.
To grab the microphone and command the crowd with serious skill and energy.
A treatment that sets your brows brushed-up and fluffy for that fox-eye, model look.
Polari for a policeman — literally a 'searching man', the figure most feared by speakers.
To astonish or overwhelm someone, often expanding their awareness.
Not gonna make it — a verdict that someone or something is doomed to fail.
A scholarly, moody aesthetic of tweed, old libraries, candlelight, classic literature, and gothic university romance.
A meaningless brainrot sound used as a dismissive or playful tag at the end of a sentence.
As Far As I Know — a hedge meaning that's true unless I'm missing something.
A lifestyle of ease, comfort, and minimal stress, by deliberate choice.
A weak, fake rapper with no skills, the kind of MC real ones eat alive on the mic.
Northern term for your younger sibling — usually a brother, sometimes any close family.
A workout plan hitting one muscle group a day — classic gym-bro programming.
To publicly and unmistakably reveal a relationship online, often after hinting at it for a while.
A quiet-luxury aesthetic mimicking inherited wealth — no logos, just polo, loafers, and discreet expensive taste.
The flipped smile — sarcasm, awkwardness, or smiling through quiet despair.
'One Of My Followers' — how stans subtweet about someone without naming them.
Cockney rhyming slang for a suit — shortened to 'whistle'.
The rugged little military runabout of WWII — and originally GI slang for any new, untested gadget or recruit.
A deliberate misspelling of 'the' that became an ironic intensifier, as in 'teh best'.
A milder Irish swear that softens 'the f-word' into something you can say to your nan.
To completely miss a shot or attack you should've landed, usually at the worst possible moment.
To sit in one spot waiting to ambush enemies instead of moving around.
Cockney rhyming slang for money — 'bees' for short.
The minimalist aesthetic of slick bun, dewy skin, gold hoops, and 'no-makeup' makeup.
Boy-crazy for men in uniform — the 1940s term for a girl smitten with soldiers.
A sharp, minimal, well-put-together outfit — nothing flashy, just crisp pieces that quietly look expensive.
A soft-grunge online boy with chains, painted nails, dyed hair, and a terminally online vibe.
Soft, feminine dance-inspired style — leg warmers, wrap tops, ribbons, ballet flats, and that off-duty dancer look.