Results for “wee bit”
Scottish for 'small' or 'little' — also used to soften a request or mean 'a bit'.
A non-Japanese person who's obsessed with anime and Japanese culture, often to a cringey degree.
Stealing somebody's rhymes, moves, or style and trying to pass it off as your own.
When someone ghosts your texts but keeps watching your stories and liking your posts.
Overly sweet, dainty, and quaint to the point of being almost too cute — cardigans, ukuleles, and whimsy.
An 80s insult for a socially clueless nerd or dork.
Internet-ironic term for the cartoonishly menacing, meme-driven side of drill culture.
Cockney for the Flying Squad — 'Sweeney Todd' rhymes with Squad, clipped to 'the Sweeney'.
A small child or annoying little kid underfoot.
The breakup letter every soldier dreaded — the homefront sweetheart calling it off while he's away.
'One Of My Followers' — how stans subtweet about someone without naming them.
Polari for pretty, nice or sweet — as in 'your dolly old eek'.
Mexican slang for 'cool,' 'awesome,' or 'sweet.'
Cheap bootleg liquor, the rough stuff that flowed through Prohibition speakeasies.
The intense hunger and snack cravings that hit after smoking weed.
Does Anyone Else — fishing to see if your weird habit is universal.
Bitter, annoyed, or resentful — especially after losing or being upset over something small.
Tacky, naff, or uncool — cheap and a bit embarrassing.
The delay between your action and the game responding — the bane of every online player.
The 'tax' of stealing a bite of your friend's food without asking.
A sweetheart or romantic partner — your boo, the one you're into.
An ambitious woman in business — now often used ironically.
Flashy, expensive designer gear worn loud to flex — UK slang leaning a bit gaudy.
An illegal Prohibition bar, where the 'juice' flowed despite the law.
Mature content — open to view.
Wholesome rizz — charming someone in a sweet, genuine way rather than a slick one.
Easing into the work week by doing only the essentials on Monday.
Someone with nothing but air between their ears — ditzy and clueless.
A practice match between teams, used to drill strats before real competition.
Bitterly disappointed or devastated — the opposite of chuffed.
A character whose love turns obsessive and dangerous — sweet on the surface, terrifying underneath.
Mature content — open to view.
Prohibition-era nickname for liquor, named for the loose, laughing mood it brought on.
Smooth talk, sweet nothings or flat-out BS, depending on who's doing the talking.
A Prohibition speakeasy dressed up as a sideshow, you paid to see the 'tiger' and got a drink free.
A hidden illegal bar of the Prohibition era where you spoke easy to get in.
Roaring Twenties for blind drunk, one of dozens of comic synonyms born under Prohibition.
An unsophisticated, rough-around-the-edges Aussie — somewhere between affectionate and an insult.
Scots for 'to cry' or weep — nothing to do with saying hello.
A narrow passage or alleyway between buildings — northern English.
A quick Patois-rooted greeting, like 'yo' or 'oi' between bredren.
Delightful, darling, or just dandy, a sweet word of approval from the flapper set.
A scholarly, moody aesthetic of tweed, old libraries, candlelight, classic literature, and gothic university romance.
To steadily accumulate small amounts of Bitcoin over time — "sats" being the smallest unit.
Suspect, unreliable, or a bit wrong — could be a person, a deal, or your stomach.
A bit hungry — not starving, just fancying a snack.