Results for “ych y fi”
Welsh for 'yuck' — pure unfiltered disgust.
Shooting a common angle before you actually see the enemy.
A flashy execution-style melee on an enemy who never saw it coming.
Whole team dumping into one enemy so they drop fast.
A straight 1v1, toe-to-toe, no kiting, no tricks — just who hits harder.
The first kill of the match, which hands out a chunk of bonus gold.
Two teammates holding different angles on the same enemy.
A close-quarters Fortnite scrap fought inside built 1x1 boxes.
Queueing solo by switching off Fill Teammates, no randoms attached.
Reading whether your move hit or got blocked, then deciding to combo or stay safe.
A combo you can loop forever while the opponent's stuck eating it.
Keeps Link's sword hitbox live long after the swing ends.
When a TAS proves it runs on real console hardware, not just an emulator.
Unembarrassed thirsting over a character who doesn't exist.
Smiling-dog-in-a-burning-room catchphrase for pretending everything's okay when it absolutely isn't.
The off-licence — corner shop that sells the booze.
Your face — usually a miserable one.
Black Country for food, especially good food.
Nose.
Doric greeting — 'how are you?'
The bin men.
'Forever I Love Atlanta' — citywide loyalty tag.
Getting what you want by slick-talking or outsmarting someone.
Oakland street dance — gliding, contorting, flexing on the block.
Caló for solid, tight, good — high praise on the Eastside.
The spare tire mounted vertical on the trunk of a Houston slab — chrome, swangin', mandatory.
Memphis crew named for the rotating count of members — three to six, depending who's around.
Southern American English for 'about to' — on the verge of doing something.
About to swing by — Houston cruising vocabulary.
Detroit for clowning, joking, acting silly.
Wisconsin/Michigan slur for a Chicago tourist.
Driving or roaming the opps' area looking for someone to catch.
Fighting In Someone's House — British shorthand for urban combat.
A scientist or technical specialist — usually the R&D brain.
All-hands cleaning of the entire space, top to bottom.
The on-base canteen and shop — and by extension, a name for a slacker.
Passing contraband cell-to-cell on a length of string.
A long razor slash across the face — named for the stitch count.
If more than five orifices have tubing in them, the patient won't make it.
Remake a dish fast after a misfire, return or screw-up.
First-in, first-out — use the old stock before the new.
A typo on the trading keyboard that fires off the wrong size, price or ticker.
The seven mega-cap US tech stocks carrying the index.
Tradesman who builds the steel reinforcement cages that go inside concrete.
Flexible metal conduit — the bendy aluminium tube you snake through finished walls.
Flexible spring-steel ribbon used to snake wires through walls and conduit.
A woven-mesh cable grip that tightens its hold the harder you pull.
Yet another name for the oxy-acetylene torch.