Results for “safe word”
The agreed word that instantly pauses or stops a scene, no questions asked.
The lane next to your tower where the carry farms in relative safety.
A jump-in timed so tight you block their wake-up reversal even if it whiffs.
A spot on screen where a boss attack simply can't touch you.
Thanks, cool, or all good — a versatile expression of approval.
A one-hander plus a shield — the classic tanking setup.
Keeps Link's sword hitbox live long after the swing ends.
An all-purpose 'I agree, for real, truth' — agreement and acknowledgment in one syllable.
Your word is your unbreakable promise, a vow of total truth and honor.
An expression of agreement or 'I hear you' from 80s hip-hop culture.
Playing it safe against a broke enemy so you don't gift them free guns.
Stashing Crypto's drone in a hidden spot so it scouts safely.
Reading whether your move hit or got blocked, then deciding to combo or stay safe.
Safer, slower strategies you run when consistency beats raw speed.
Two-word dismissal blaming someone's complaint on them being bad.
Safe for work — the wholesome inverse of NSFW.
One-word reply meaning 'exactly, nothing to add.'
Sarcastic clap-back at someone congratulating themselves for a totally safe opinion.
Old Scouse for mate — your granddad's word.
Liverpool word for a soft idiot, usually said with a smirk.
A taxi — Liverpool's word for flagging a cab.
Food, especially a packed lunch — old miners' word still going strong.
Black Country word for sherbet powder.
A rubbish heap or dustbin — old Black Country word for the midden.
Sweets. The Black Country word for confectionery.
Birmingham's brutal hide-and-seek variant — find the safe zone before 'it' shouts your name.
Have a word with yourself.
To stab someone — drill-era word for it.
Welsh word for a cuddle — or a cosy little hiding place.
Welsh and West Country word for plimsolls or trainers.
Welsh-English for 'over there' — pointing-word with extra welly.
A newt — old dialect word still alive in Wales.
A sergeant — Welsh loanword used in English military and historical writing.
Welsh for wonderful, marvellous, brilliant — the North's preferred word over 'lush'.
Lowland Scots word for a Highlander or anyone from the rural sticks.
Dundonian word for a drain or drain cover.
Dundonian word for a roundabout.
Doric word for a girl or young woman.
Doric word for a boy or young man.
Belly or stomach — old Scots word still kicking around.
Dublin word for a culchie — anyone from the countryside.
A young scallywag — Dublin's word for a rowdy lout.
Dublin word for a child.
Girlfriend. Dublin word for your other half.
A gullible fool — an Irish word for someone who'll believe anything.
Dublin's word for a chav — tracksuited, gobby, working-class stereotype.
Catholic-safe exclamation — a 'Jesus!' that won't get you a clip round the ear.
'The hell are you talking about?' — slurred into one word.