Results for “what's for ye'll no go by ye”
How are you / what's the craic — Irish all-purpose greeting.
What's meant for you won't pass you by
A group's final performance before ending promotions.
Geordie for shut your mouth.
Thick-headed, stupid.
that's really good, isn't it
I'll be right there / yes; a quick affirmative reply.
Besides; in addition to; as well
Please don't do that — a firm/comic request to stop
Cockney back-slang for 'money' — the day's takings, said backwards.
Any playable character in Smite, deity or not.
Downed into a crawling bleed-out state, not dead yet.
Queueing solo by switching off Fill Teammates, no randoms attached.
Cutesy doggo-speak for a snake.
Nosey — sticking your beak where it doesn't belong.
Nearly. Almost. Not quite there yet.
Arctic char — the rare red-bellied fish of North Wales lakes.
A clue — almost always used in the negative ('I havnae got a scooby').
Get lost. Literally 'go boil your head'.
Sarcastic 'absolutely not' dressed up as a question.
Plastic cup for taking your drink onto the street — legal in NOLA.
NOLA way of saying 'at my house,' calqued from French.
Emphatic New Orleans agreement — the canonical Yat affirmation.
To stop in and visit somewhere, not just walk past it.
A doctor's polished shrug when a dying patient asks how long they've got.
Are you listening to the CB right now?
A dancer still in her first couple of years in the club.
The diagram telling staff exactly which product goes on which shelf, facing which way.
A UK Special Constable — volunteer with full powers but no pay.
The emcee's call announcing the theme contestants must serve before they walk.
Mature content — open to view.
A negotiated kink where partners play as if consent's been waived, inside pre-agreed limits.
A male-dominant BDSM lifestyle modelled on the slavery world of John Norman's Gor novels.
Polari for goodnight — from Italian 'buona notte'.
A soft 'no'; 'I hear you, but no'.
Not very good.
a soft 'yes' (with acknowledgement)
Fine; all good; no problem
It's fine; no problem
The oppressive social/economic order