Results for “tell you how the cow ate the cabbage”
I'm about to tell you the plain truth.
Prompt format inviting indirect self-disclosure through telling details.
television
Mature content — open to view.
To get in trouble and be shipped to another prison.
Repositioning to another spot when the enemy shows up somewhere else.
Playing a vert in tate mode by lying on your side instead of rotating the TV.
A full snapshot of the game you can reload instantly.
A devastating reply telling someone their tweet was so bad they should quit the platform.
Brutal reply telling someone they used to be good and aren't anymore.
Hello, how are you — collapsed into one syllable.
Midwest party snack — Chex coated in chocolate, peanut butter, powdered sugar.
A surgeon who operates aggressively and off the guidelines.
How fast a startup is torching its cash.
Mature content — open to view.
RuPaul's phrase telling the lip-sync winner she's safe.
How are you? (greeting).
a person you're referring to (name unknown or unstated)
how are you? (greeting)
Hi; how are you?
A housemate; someone you share a flat with
Rubber-coated plates you can safely drop.
A show-off who plays for the highlight reel over the team.
Your single favorite idol across all of K-pop, not just one group.
Publicly listing yourself as available to date.
A young professional documenting relatable office-job life online.
Go your own way
Matching a character's look exactly as shown on screen.
Sympathy—or a sugar-coated insult, depending on tone.
How cute—or how foolish (sarcastic).
You can't make something fine from poor material.
Someone who resents your success instead of getting their own.
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.
The soldier first in the mess line and last to leave — the unit's bottomless eater.
Cockney rhyming slang for the missus — your wife or partner.
A Valley-girl insult telling someone to cover their ugly mug with a bag.
Cockney for feet — 'plates of meat' rhymes with feet, clipped to your 'plates'.
A breezy goodbye meaning 'see you later' or 'until next time.'
Nadsat for good, excellent, or first-rate, a pun on the Russian 'khorosho'.