Results for “simón que yes”
Caló 'yes' — a stylish, affirmative 'sí'.
Doing things out of the intended order to skip ahead.
The lit-up artwork sign crowning an arcade cabinet.
Bailing out of champ select before the match starts to escape a bad team.
Scouse for a woman — the female 'la'.
Cockney rhyming slang, usually for 'Greek'.
Yat for sidewalk.
Detroit coney-shop question: Cheez Whiz from the bottle or American slices on your chili-cheese fries?
Prison slang for a child molester.
Patient who keeps turning up to A&E like it's a loyalty scheme.
The ambulance that spends more time in the shop than on the road.
An unplanned detour or random adventure that pulls you off your main task — borrowed from video games.
A lifted, elongated, almond eye look — makeup or a literal cosmetic lift.
A hyper-feminine, bow-covered aesthetic of lace, pink, ribbons, and soft girlish romance.
The ward that gives you eyes on a chunk of the map.
A god's set sequence of basic attacks, each step with its own animation and damage.
Queue for a random instance and take whatever the game throws at you.
Slipping light attacks between your abilities to squeeze out extra DPS.
The rapid ramp-and-wall build technique for rushing to high ground.
Queueing solo by switching off Fill Teammates, no randoms attached.
Keeping a boss or enemy alive to squeeze out maximum points.
Tongue-in-cheek job claim used to dodge questions about your real one.
A child raised on tablet content, eyes glazed, brain rotted by the algorithm.
The 2021 GameStop short-squeeze saga, in stonks-meme form.
Dole money — the weekly benefits cheque.
Emphatic yes. The Geordie 'of course, mate'.
To barge into a queue. The cardinal British sin.
Welsh universal tag question stuck on the end of any statement.
Sarcastic 'absolutely not' dressed up as a question.
For life — also 21 Savage & Young Nudy's clique tag.
051 Young Money — rival Gangster Disciples set frequently dissed on O'Block records.
Houston DJ technique — slow the track, chop it up.
NOLA bounce variant fronted by queer, trans, and drag performers.
NOLA way of saying 'at my house,' calqued from French.
A merry-go-round, specifically the antique one in City Park.
Cheap fast food from the hood — wing spots, taquerias, corner-store plates.
Money — banknotes with the Queen's face on them.
Money — a banknote, named for the Queen on the front.
Mature content — open to view.
Free, spare, or extra — no cost, no questions.
The Marine Corps battle cry — used for yes, hell yes, motivation, acknowledgement, or just to fill silence.
A formal written request for anything official in the military.
A head swollen grotesquely round from a serious beating.
Throw hands first, ask questions never.
Your clique inside — usually by race or gang.
The next order in the queue — get ready.
CB operator using illegally modified out-of-band frequencies.
Salomon bond desk's grotesque Friday food ritual.