Results for “off the top”
Wild, exciting, and amazing — so good it's out of control.
Holding an unexpected spot instead of the standard one.
The second tank, built for damage and dives rather than shielding the team.
The hero who plays the hard lane, often solo against two enemies.
The off-licence — corner shop that sells the booze.
Cook is stepping away from their station — cover them.
To leave very quickly.
Defenders stepping up together to catch attackers offside.
A team meeting held away from the office.
The process of managing an employee's exit from a company.
Wind blowing from land to sea — the surfer's best friend.
Hitting the breaking crest and dropping back down.
A sexy-secretary corporate aesthetic — pencil skirts, tiny glasses, sharp tailoring, and early-2000s power-dressing.
Wild, exciting, out of control in the best way.
Affectionate command to stop posting before you make it worse.
CID putdown for a uniformed officer.
Maxing the score counter so it physically can't display any higher.
Brutal reply telling someone they used to be good and aren't anymore.
A moment so unhinged it marks the peak of the market.
Scouse for skiving — bunking off school or work.
Bail on plans last-minute without bothering to explain.
Cheap frozen cordial lollies in a long plastic tube — peak Brummie corner-shop nostalgia.
Excellent, the best.
A fart.
Killed. MLE/drill euphemism for being murdered.
Welsh-English for last orders — closing time at the pub.
A frozen sugary ice-pop in a long plastic tube.
Bawl someone out, go ballistic at them.
Showing out — performing in flashy, undeniable style.
A scientist or technical specialist — usually the R&D brain.
A patient turning up with a bizarre injury and an even more bizarre story to explain it.
Suffix for the seat count of a table — two-top, four-top, six-top.
Loud and clear — a signal coming in perfect.
Sharp collective selling that tanks prices.
Finished your apprenticeship — or the last beam is set on the building.
The ceremony for placing the highest beam on a building.
A table for two.
A table for four.
A Top who delivers the action — but at the Bottom's explicit direction.
When the Bottom tries to steer the scene against the agreed power dynamic.