Results for “off da chain”
Wild, exciting, out of control in the best way.
Wild, exciting, and amazing — so good it's out of control.
A sexy-secretary corporate aesthetic — pencil skirts, tiny glasses, sharp tailoring, and early-2000s power-dressing.
A hip, affectionate way to address a man — the beatnik equivalent of 'man' or 'dude.'
Korean for 'awesome' or 'jackpot' — what you yell when something's incredible.
Dating while stuck in constant hesitation, too unsure to commit or fully walk away.
Does Anyone Else — fishing to see if your weird habit is universal.
The dreaded workout for legs — and the meme about everyone skipping it.
To go off impressively — kill it, get hyped, or unleash a passionate rant.
Cockney rhyming slang for believe — 'would you Adam and Eve it?'
The limits you set on how people can treat you — therapy-speak's MVP word.
Money, cash, paper — a tasty 2000s word for it.
Disbelief at someone's nerve — they did something so bold and disrespectful you can barely process it.
The absolute best — something so good it's explosive.
Means 'seriously' or 'for real' — you're not joking even a little.
Easing into the work week by doing only the essentials on Monday.
Polari for to look at or to see — the verb of the discreet, knowing glance.
Cockney back-slang for 'bad' — spoiled stock, a poor pitch, a wrong'un.
British slang for eating something fast and greedily — to scoff the lot.
Bold, audacious, and excellent — admirable in a big, confident way.
Cockney for boots — 'daisy roots' rhymes with boots, clipped to your 'daisies'.
Someone who pulls away from closeness when things get real.
A compliment for a man who's sharply and stylishly dressed; neat, polished, and well put-together.
Drinking during daytime — the chaotic, sun-soaked cousin of a night out.
Scottish for a silly or daft person — gentle and affectionate.
The people who've been with you from the very beginning.
A scholarly, moody aesthetic of tweed, old libraries, candlelight, classic literature, and gothic university romance.
The night, in the cant — when the angler hooked windows and the prig went to work.
Soft, feminine dance-inspired style — leg warmers, wrap tops, ribbons, ballet flats, and that off-duty dancer look.
A day off work claiming illness — often when you're not actually sick.
A quick show-off of what you're wearing today, usually a head-to-toe photo or clip.
Someone who posts deliberately shocking, dark, or offensive content to seem edgy and provoke reactions.
Verlan for 'flic' (cop) — the standard banlieue word for a police officer.
Outfit Of The Day — the hashtag/post showing off what you're wearing right now.
McDonald's — so iconic the chain put 'Maccas' on Aussie store signs officially.
Someone grinding hard at the gym hoping muscle alone will fix their dating life.
The breakup letter every soldier dreaded — the homefront sweetheart calling it off while he's away.
'Let me know' — the go-to sign-off when you're waiting on someone's answer.
Stealing somebody's rhymes, moves, or style and trying to pass it off as your own.
A party where everyone dances to music through wireless headphones, not speakers.
Polari for none, no, or beware — a vital warning word in dangerous times.
A workout plan hitting one muscle group a day — classic gym-bro programming.
To leave or take off — to clear out of a place, fast or casual.
We're all gonna make it — a hype mantra of solidarity and shared optimism.
An instrumental made to sound like a specific artist — and a meme format for 'this gives off ___ energy.'
An unplanned detour or random adventure that pulls you off your main task — borrowed from video games.
Hiding that you're dating loads of people and acting shocked when you get caught.
Mature content — open to view.