Results for “wen lambo ser”
Impatiently asking when a coin will make you rich enough to buy a Lamborghini.
Paying a premium for a reserved table and full bottles at a club — flexing money.
Something or someone tremendously good, the most, an absolute riot.
A service station — the petrol station where you fuel up and grab a dodgy pie.
Delivering a look so strong you're 'serving' it up like a runway moment.
Someone relentlessly focused on making money — chasing the bag above all else.
To deliver a flawless look or attitude with full confidence — she's serving.
Delivered an amazing look or performance with total confidence.
A meme-spelled 'sir' used to address fellow traders, both respectfully and ironically.
A working-class youth with slicked-back hair, leather jacket, and a love of cars and rock-n-roll.
When a plan goes wrong — 'it all went pear-shaped.'
Underrated or overlooked — not getting the attention it deserves.
An icon is being an absolute icon — a queen serving exactly what fans love.
A plea for someone to be serious or honest — 'you cannot be so for real right now.'
To collect a serious amount of money or land a big win.
'For real' — used to agree hard or to swear you're being dead serious.
What's up — the drawn-out 90s greeting Budweiser turned into a national catchphrase.
Very, a lot — the NorCal intensifier that went national.
In serious trouble or completely overwhelmed.
The top rank of the canting crew — the boss rogue who lorded it over every lesser vagabond.
'Good game, easy' — typed after a win to flex and disrespect the losers in one breath.
An intensifier meaning 'completely' or 'to the max' — she served the house down.
A girlfriend you see as serious, long-term, and basically marriage material.
Means 'seriously' or 'for real' — you're not joking even a little.
"Be so for real" — a way to express disbelief, like "are you serious?" or "stop lying."
A biscuit (cookie) — and 'big bickies' means a serious amount of money.
Excessively praised or hyped up beyond what's deserved.
The single raised eyebrow — skepticism, suspicion, or 'are you serious right now?'
The gold standard of Twenties praise, the most stylish, splendid thing going.
Seriously rich — pockets stacked, money everywhere.
Twenties slang for so drunk you've gone stiff as bone.
To grab the microphone and command the crowd with serious skill and energy.
A monocle-wearing Pepe emote for a smart, classy, or detective-level observation.
Either super impressive or seriously nasty — same word, opposite vibes, all about intensity.
Someone who's seriously good at basketball — a real player, not a casual.
A car stripped down and souped up for speed, the centerpiece of greaser culture.
A punch in the mouth, served up as a threat.
Brilliant, class, or great — Irish for something seriously good.
A warning sign that someone or something has a serious problem — a reason to be cautious.
Roaring Twenties praise for the absolute best thing or person around.
Roaring Twenties for blind drunk, one of dozens of comic synonyms born under Prohibition.
Asking for trouble — headed straight toward a beating or serious consequences.
Public Service Announcement — flagging info you think everyone needs to hear.
Profound, serious, or emotionally intense.
The ballroom emcee's call announcing the theme contestants must serve — 'the category is...'
British slang for someone or something seriously attractive, fit, or top-quality.
The For You Page on TikTok — the algorithmic feed; being on someone's fyp means the algorithm served them your video.
A large amount of money — slang for serious cash.