Results for “trading pit”
Swapping damage with your laner while both of you stay in lane.
The slide deck a bank uses to win a deal.
The tiered ring on an exchange floor where open-outcry traders work.
The bound presentation bankers use to pitch a deal or sell their services.
To rap, especially to deliver bars with skill — 'spit a verse' means lay down some rhymes.
The chaotic crowd zone where everyone slams together — now huge in rap shows too.
Mature content — open to view.
Pit trading by shouting and hand signals.
Real-world trading — swapping in-game wealth for actual money.
Aggressively pushing the enemy despite the risk.
Boldly challenging an enemy despite bad odds, on pure confidence.
Viral onomatopoeia for a spit, from a street-interview clip heard around the world.
Trading profits, imagined as a reward of chicken tenders.
Hospital.
A colliery spoil heap — the pit-waste mounds that scar the Black Country.
Pit-head winding gear — originally the horse-powered version.
The ash-hole — the pit under the grate where the coal ash falls.
Welsh mining wagon that ferried colliers in and out of the pit.
Scots and Northern English for armpits.
Memphis verb — get rowdy, go wild, lose it in the pit.
Poor Bloody Infantry — the grunt's affectionate self-pity.
Trading something that isn't yours for something that isn't theirs.
Hospital slang for a motorcycle — a reliable pipeline of fresh organ donors.
Affectionate hospital nickname for the psychiatry team.
A confused elderly woman clutching her handbag in the hospital bed — a soft sign of dementia.
Cruel hospital shorthand for bedridden elderly dementia patients.
Hospital slang for an obese patient — from BMI.
Steak charred hard on the outside, raw and cool in the middle — Pittsburgh-style.
Pit stop — pulling over for a bathroom break.
A green trainee on the Salomon Brothers trading floor.
A typo on the trading keyboard that fires off the wrong size, price or ticker.
Trading a stock among yourselves to fake volume or move the price.
Trading ahead of a client's order you know is about to move the price.
A broker over-trading a client's account just to harvest commissions.
The last hour of trading on options-expiry days, when prices go feral.
Slow steady erosion of P&L, premium or capital.
The collective US investment-banking and trading world.
UK ambulance run on lights and sirens with a hospital pre-alert — time-critical.
A teary-eyed cat emote for soft sadness, disappointment, or pity.
Verlan for 'pitie' — short form 'tiep', used for something pitiful, lame, or gross.
Joke term for the panic of having nothing good to wear despite a full wardrobe.
An illegal Prohibition bar, where the 'juice' flowed despite the law.
The smooth pitch-bend of an 808 bass — the production move that defines UK drill.
Cockney back-slang for 'bad' — spoiled stock, a poor pitch, a wrong'un.
Unrealistic or excessive hope you cling to despite the odds — like a drug.
Being deliberately spiteful over small things, often in a funny, dramatic way.
"You all" — the Pittsburgh second-person plural, a hallmark of the local dialect.
A collectible idol trading card hidden in albums — the lifeblood of K-pop merch trading.