Results for “rough trade”
Mature content — open to view.
A rude raspberry blown to show contempt, named for New York's loudest borough of hecklers.
A party where everyone dances to music through wireless headphones, not speakers.
Mature content — open to view.
The flipped smile — sarcasm, awkwardness, or smiling through quiet despair.
Cash earned through your connect — money from the source or the hookup.
Cheap bootleg liquor, the rough stuff that flowed through Prohibition speakeasies.
The riskiest, wildest frontier of crypto — hunting new memecoins and speculative launches; also street slang for a rough area.
Style, charm, or the ability to attract a romantic partner through sheer presence.
Butchers' back-slang for 'beef' — prime cut of the 'rechtub kelp' trade.
To hold a coin no matter what, never selling through any crash — born from a famous typo.
Cockney back-slang for 'police' — 'police' spoken roughly backwards so the law wouldn't twig.
Tango itself, spun through vesre: tan-go flipped into go-tan.
A reckless gambler-trader who chases high-risk plays for the thrill — worn as a badge of pride.
Killing an enemy by shooting straight through a wall or surface.
Maximizing your physical attractiveness through grooming, fitness, mewing, and other appearance hacks.
Homemade beaded bracelets ravers trade as gifts and symbols of connection.
A thief who 'fished' goods through open windows with a hooked pole by night.
A tradesperson — sparky, chippy, plumber, the blokes and women who build the country.
Mature content — open to view.
Prohibition-era nickname for liquor, named for the loose, laughing mood it brought on.
To lose a winning game through bad play, sometimes on purpose.
Blowing a winnable game through bad decisions — losing a lead you should've closed out.
Holding an asset through brutal crashes without selling — nerves of steel, hands of diamond.
To get something through smooth skill or slick manoeuvring — sometimes by trickery.
A man or bloke — often a rough or scruffy one — in the northeast and Scotland.
Someone loyal enough to stick with you through anything.
Wrecked — financially destroyed by a bad trade, or just badly beaten at anything.
An instrumental or beat — Jamaican-derived word that runs through UK street music.
Imaginary 'drug' you take to cope with a loss or disappointment through denial.
A meme-spelled 'sir' used to address fellow traders, both respectfully and ironically.
An unsophisticated, rough-around-the-edges Aussie — somewhere between affectionate and an insult.
Mature content — open to view.
Dominating your opponent so thoroughly you're basically cooking them like a meal.
An ongoing feud or grudge — in rap, a public conflict often played out through diss tracks.