Results for “on her bill”
One guy buying a rifle while the rest of the team saves.
Enthusiastic support — you fully endorse it.
The impossibly desirable person everyone wants to be — or be with.
The hyper-protective love-interest trope, distilled.
On my own, by myself, flying solo.
To pester, bother or nag — Brummie/Black Country spelling of 'mither'.
To pester, nag or do someone's head in.
Cockney rhyming slang for a cab (taxi).
South Wales (and West Country) way of asking 'where are you?'
Welsh-English for 'over there' — pointing-word with extra welly.
Right here — Welsh English's way of pointing without lifting a finger.
Someone who bunks off school — a serial skiver.
MC T. Tucker & DJ Irv's 1991 single — widely cited as the first true bounce record.
New Orleans for 'how you doing?' — not 'where are you'.
Cajun term of endearment, from French chéri(e).
A US Marine — from the leather neck-stock of the early Corps uniform.
The female counterpart to a peckerwood.
An obstetrician — or anyone whose job is catching the kid on the way out.
A surgeon.
A truck-mounted bucket lift for working at height.
A plumber.
Sheet metal worker — anyone fabbing or fitting ductwork and metal.
London slang for the police.
An icon is being an absolute icon — a queen serving exactly what fans love.
In mint, like-new, perfectly maintained condition — said especially of a car.
A look — cockney rhyming slang from butcher's hook = look; have a butchers means have a look.
The WWII GI's calling card — scrawled graffiti proving 'we were here first,' usually with a long-nosed peeping cartoon.
A 1920s cry of 'nonsense!' since horses have no feathers in the first place.
Hopelessly square, dull, or worthless — going nowhere, leading nowhere.
A breezy, expensive-but-effortless aesthetic of linen, neutral tones, and living like a wealthy retiree by the sea.
A figure of authority and admiration — the icon everyone looks up to, or the head of a ballroom house.
A circle of rappers taking turns freestyling, each one passing the mic and trying to outdo the last.
An 80s catchphrase asking where the substance is — all sizzle, no steak.
Completely calm and unaffected by drama, criticism, or stress.
Billy Herrington emote for over-the-top pleasure and satisfaction.
Polari for a dull or unavailable man — 'naff' here meaning ordinary, possibly 'not available for...'.
Flicking in and out of cover fast to bait shots and gather info.
Defusing the bomb undetected while enemies are right there.
Repositioning to another spot when the enemy shows up somewhere else.
Standing on a teammate's head to reach a sightline you couldn't otherwise hit.
Real-time read on where the enemies are and what they're about to do.
The bit after the spike's down, where you fight to defend the detonation.
A comp of fast heroes that jump on and isolate a single target.
The heroes sitting behind the tanks, deadly at range but soft up close.
The second tank, built for damage and dives rather than shielding the team.
The spot in the lane where the two creep waves crash and hold position.
Shoving a sidelane solo while your team draws pressure somewhere else.
Sneaking into the enemy base to smash objectives while they're busy elsewhere.