Results for “the run”
Hyped, rowdy, and turnt — the energy of Southern 2000s rap.
An extended stretch of rising prices and euphoria when everything seems to go up.
A DJ or artist's full performance — the run of tracks they play in their slot.
The rugged little military runabout of WWII — and originally GI slang for any new, untested gadget or recruit.
Full of alcohol, or describing a fun drink-heavy occasion — a boozy brunch.
A long stretch of falling prices and gloom — the cold winter after the bull run.
Pleasantly buzzed from drinking — past sober, nowhere near drunk.
Pleasantly tipsy — feeling alcohol's first warm glow, but not drunk.
A soft-grunge online boy with chains, painted nails, dyed hair, and a terminally online vibe.
A session — usually of drinking, smoking, or partying that runs long.
Valley-girl for 'definitely' or 'absolutely' — often crunched into 'fer sure.'
Extremely drunk — one of Ireland's many words for falling-down intoxicated.
To talk way too much, especially about nothing — a yapper is someone who won't stop running their mouth.
Very drunk — sloppy, unsteady, and clearly over the line.
A Nadsat word for a friend or running mate, anglicised from the Russian for friend.
Extremely drunk or high — far past tipsy, barely functional.
A crypto scam where developers abandon a project and run off with investors' money.
Delivering a look so strong you're 'serving' it up like a runway moment.
A total mess, a chaotic uproar, from an African word for a runaway-slave settlement.
Money — classic, long-running slang for cash.
Twenties slang for so drunk you've gone stiff as bone.
Steroids and performance-enhancing drugs — 'running gear' means a steroid cycle.
An instrumental or beat — Jamaican-derived word that runs through UK street music.
Not quite ELI5, but a request for a fairly simple, low-jargon rundown.
A large dance party with electronic music, often running all night.
Roaring Twenties for blind drunk, one of dozens of comic synonyms born under Prohibition.
To talk a lot, to run your mouth or chatter away.
To run off or flee fast — Polari and Cockney for making a quick getaway.
The involuntary scrunched-up face you make when a heavy bass drop hits.