Results for “tab”
Geordie and Scottish for cigarettes — plural by default.
One full cycle of seat, serve, clear — the unit a restaurant lives or dies by.
An auto-transporter — the truck that hauls a stack of cars.
Polari for wonderful or marvellous — a blend of fabulous and fantastic with extra flourish.
The window when the boss is actually hittable — make it count.
Dead air in a fight — the boss is untargetable and you can't deal damage.
A child raised on tablet content, eyes glazed, brain rotted by the algorithm.
Agreement tag stuck on the end of a relatable statement.
Maximum relatable. Often paired with an absurd image that captures exactly how you feel.
Open-mouthed wojak edit posted to mock another user's take as nerdy or pathetically excitable.
Romance-novel hero archetype: older, distinguished, commanding — but the kind who'd order for the table and fix your problems.
Romance subgenre that leans into the taboo — morally grey leads, violence, dubcon, kidnap plots.
Mock astonishment at the most predictable outcome on earth.
To scrounge, beg, or blag — usually for tabs, lifts or a pint.
A knife — or to stab someone with one.
To stab someone — knife reference, chef's knife.
To stab someone — drill-era word for it.
The Welsh-speaking establishment elite — Wales's own snob class.
To stab someone — or the blade you do it with.
A hustle — a profitable lick or money move.
Stabbed up — knife work, drill-scene shorthand.
New Orleans name for the chayote — vegetable pear, pantry staple.
UK drill word for a knife — or to stab.
UK drill term for a knife — specifically one carried for stabbing.
UK drill for stabbed.
Stabbed — soaked in your own blood.
Stabbing or killing in UK drill — drawing blood.
Slashed or stabbed — UK drill onomatopoeia for the sound of a blade.
To stab or shoot a rival.
Logged on the Met Police's gang database.
Inflatable life-jacket — named for the curves.
A makeshift stabbing weapon — prison-made blade.
A mentally unstable inmate whose behaviour is wildly unpredictable.
Carry plates from the pass to the table.
Suffix for the seat count of a table — two-top, four-top, six-top.
Diners who squat at a table long after the meal's done.
Clear, reset, and reseat a table at full speed.
A table for two.
A table for four.
Carry a plated dish from the pass to its table.
A UK Special Constable — volunteer with full powers but no pay.
To make money and provide — everybody at the table getting fed.
Mature content — open to view.
Paying a premium for a reserved table and full bottles at a club — flexing money.
Mature content — open to view.
The portable stereo you hauled on your shoulder to bring the party with you.
So hungry you've turned irritable and snappy — hungry plus angry.
Mature content — open to view.