Results for “word to my mother”
Radio proword: comms are bad, send each phrase twice.
I swear to; on my word
An all-purpose 'I agree, for real, truth' — agreement and acknowledgment in one syllable.
Your word is your unbreakable promise, a vow of total truth and honor.
An expression of agreement or 'I hear you' from 80s hip-hop culture.
A one-hander plus a shield — the classic tanking setup.
Keeps Link's sword hitbox live long after the swing ends.
The experienced leader who heads a ballroom house and mentors its children.
An established queen who mentors and 'raises' a newer performer.
The agreed word that instantly pauses or stops a scene, no questions asked.
Mother of one's child
The archetypal East End pub sing-along and dance.
Looks like rain is coming.
An icon is being an absolute icon — a queen serving exactly what fans love.
A breezy, expensive-but-effortless aesthetic of linen, neutral tones, and living like a wealthy retiree by the sea.
A figure of authority and admiration — the icon everyone looks up to, or the head of a ballroom house.
Your mother and the whole rest of the family — one mashed-up word.
An in-your-face archetype that wins by smothering you with fast offense.
Two-word dismissal blaming someone's complaint on them being bad.
One-word reply meaning 'exactly, nothing to add.'
Old Scouse for mate — your granddad's word.
Liverpool word for a soft idiot, usually said with a smirk.
A taxi — Liverpool's word for flagging a cab.
Food, especially a packed lunch — old miners' word still going strong.
Black Country word for sherbet powder.
A rubbish heap or dustbin — old Black Country word for the midden.
Sweets. The Black Country word for confectionery.
Have a word with yourself.
To stab someone — drill-era word for it.
Welsh word for a cuddle — or a cosy little hiding place.
North Wales for grandmother.
Mother — the Welsh-English standard.
Welsh and West Country word for plimsolls or trainers.
Welsh-English for 'over there' — pointing-word with extra welly.
A newt — old dialect word still alive in Wales.
A sergeant — Welsh loanword used in English military and historical writing.
Welsh for wonderful, marvellous, brilliant — the North's preferred word over 'lush'.
Lowland Scots word for a Highlander or anyone from the rural sticks.
Dundonian word for a drain or drain cover.
Dundonian word for a roundabout.