Results for “she ate”
A glamorous, alluring young woman of the jazz age, the female counterpart to a sheik.
A smooth, romantic young ladies' man of the 1920s, named after Valentino.
An exclamation of amazement or hype, drawn out as "sheeeesh" to gas something up.
Cockney rhyming slang for the missus — your wife or partner.
Did something exceptionally well — "she ate that," often "ate and left no crumbs."
Someone who resents your success instead of getting their own.
To hoard access or info about something so others can't get in on it — keeping a thing exclusive on purpose.
Did something flawlessly and completely — absolutely nailed it with nothing left to criticize.
The clipped Cockney form of 'plates of meat' — meaning feet, usually sore ones.
Emotionally calm and in control of your nervous system — the goal state.
Means the greatest of all time; the highest praise you can give someone or something.
A friendly term of address for a fellow hipster or musician, like 'pal' with jive flavor.
Someone who looks stylish and confident while crushing it at an office job.
A jaw-droppingly glamorous, knockout-gorgeous woman — old-Hollywood energy.
Past your prime — no longer skilled or relevant.
An absolutely fire track — a tune so good it sets the crowd off.
Very drunk — sloppy, unsteady, and clearly over the line.
Cockney for feet — 'plates of meat' rhymes with feet, clipped to your 'plates'.
Cockney for mate — 'china plate' rhymes with mate, clipped to 'me old china'.
A flapper-era dandy, the smooth, idle ladies' man who lived for parties and easy charm.
Prohibition-era nickname for liquor, named for the loose, laughing mood it brought on.
Did something exceptionally well and left nothing to criticise.
Roaring Twenties for blind drunk, one of dozens of comic synonyms born under Prohibition.
Friend — also a casual way to address anyone, friendly or confrontational.
An ironic motto mocking hustle culture by stacking three buzzwords into a fake life mantra.
A dismissive 'I don't care' delivered with maximum attitude.
The ballroom emcee's call announcing the theme contestants must serve — 'the category is...'
Emotionally overwhelmed and out of control — the spiral state.
Pirated, cracked software distributed illegally, a cornerstone term of old BBS and scene culture.
A scheme to hype a coin up, sell at the peak, and leave latecomers holding the crash.
Mature content — open to view.
A ballroom category of high-fashion, over-the-top glamour and extravagance.
A lifestyle of ease, comfort, and minimal stress, by deliberate choice.
To overwhelm an enemy with sheer numbers rather than skill, from StarCraft's Zerg race.
An animated head-bobbing cat emote spammed when the music or vibe is good.
Cant for a man or fellow — your 'cove' could be a mate, a master, or the mark.
UK slang meaning very attractive or, separately, physically muscular.
To get so frustrated you start playing worse and spiral.
A hip, affectionate way to address a man — the beatnik equivalent of 'man' or 'dude.'
To meet up with someone, or to date casually.
A deliberate misspelling of 'the' that became an ironic intensifier, as in 'teh best'.
The eternal anime debate: watch with subtitles and Japanese audio, or with an English dub.
The ultimate Valley-girl expression of disgust — 'that's so gross I could throw up.'
A blissful state of having zero thoughts in your head — peaceful, dumb, and free.
Underrated or overlooked — not getting the attention it deserves.
So in love or devoted to a partner that you do whatever they want.
The Mexican office-worker stereotype — the corporate nine-to-five drone.
To rush in the instant gates open, sprinting to claim the rail or front spot.