Results for “tl dr”
Too long; didn't read — the one-line summary of a wall of text.
Effortlessly stylish clothes, jewelry, and overall swagger — looking expensive and put-together.
Cockney rhyming slang for a suit — shortened to 'whistle'.
A short, flat-out car race from a standing start — or something boring.
Mexican slang for 'cool' or 'great' — 'qué padre!' means 'how cool!'
A money-making gig you do alongside your main job.
Paying a premium for a reserved table and full bottles at a club — flexing money.
A fool or idiot — an affectionately scornful Aussie word for a hopeless dimwit.
A liquor store — the bottle shop where Aussies stock up on grog.
GI slang for the cramped troop transport that hauled men packed in like livestock.
A Jazz Age layabout, a young man who slept all day and dodged work, the original slacker.
A dull, boring, depressing situation or place — a total drag.
A Nadsat word for a friend or running mate, anglicised from the Russian for friend.
Mature content — open to view.
Harshly criticised or mocked, especially publicly online.
Courage or nerve — "having bottle" means being brave; "losing your bottle" means chickening out.
To release new music — and as a noun, the moment a beat kicks in and the song explodes.
Fully decked out in stylish, expensive-looking clothes and jewelry from head to toe.
Short for a Draco pistol — a popular firearm reference in trap and drill lyrics.
An affectionate term for a close friend or brother, rooted in Jamaican Patois.
The moment a track's tension breaks and the bass and beat slam back in.
Out Of The Loop — admitting you have no idea what everyone's talking about.
The belief that you must constantly work and grind to be worthy or successful.
Drinking during daytime — the chaotic, sun-soaked cousin of a night out.
A dark, menacing rap subgenre built on sliding 808s and cold, deadpan flows.
Mature content — open to view.
To spend a large amount of money on something, no flinching.
A petty criminal, crook or lowlife, a fixture of the tango underworld.
Clothes — a classic, slightly retro way to refer to your outfit or wardrobe.
A well-off, well-dressed man about town, the tango's classic flush gentleman.
Pleasantly buzzed from drinking — past sober, nowhere near drunk.
Pleasantly tipsy — feeling alcohol's first warm glow, but not drunk.
An aesthetic obsessed with spotless, organized, satisfying tidiness — fresh laundry, neat shelves, and order.
Dressing like a stylish, slightly eccentric grandpa — cardigans, layered knits, loafers, and comfy thrifted charm.
The breakup letter every soldier dreaded — the homefront sweetheart calling it off while he's away.
Excellent, top quality, the highest grade, flipped from drug slang into pure praise.
A low-stress, decent-paying job with flexible hours and little pressure.
The little sparkles — magic, excitement, or sarcastic emphasis around a word.
A subgenre of hip-hop, or slang for a place where hustling happens.
The little salute — 'understood, on it,' respect, or playful loyalty.
Effortless personal style and confidence — a blend of "style" and "ease."
Dressing like a regular British football lad — retro soccer jerseys, trainers, jeans, and a casual everyman swagger.
Makeup applied flawlessly and fully — a face that's beat is perfectly done.
To move around quietly, often up to something or scoping a situation out.
Patois for a con artist, trickster, or smooth-talking hustler.
Over-the-top, dramatic, or doing way too much — more than the situation calls for.
Mature content — open to view.
A hip, affectionate way to address a man — the beatnik equivalent of 'man' or 'dude.'