Results for “you get me”
Brutal reply telling someone they used to be good and aren't anymore.
Taunt: reach in on defense and get scored on
Said when handing something over; 'here you go'.
Plural 'you' — talking to more than one of yer.
You lot — the plural 'you' in MLE.
A young girl — usually a teenager or younger woman.
That fella over there — no, he's not actually yours.
An exclamation of delight.
you (plural)
Are you okay? / Do you need help?
A show-off who plays for the highlight reel over the team.
The perfect person or thing for the job
'Do you understand?' / 'you know?'
Lend me your ears, that is, listen up and pay attention.
Dead air in a fight — the boss is untargetable and you can't deal damage.
Offensive pressure you pile on while the opponent gets up off the floor.
Scouse for 'come on' — let's go, get on with it, or you're joking.
'Hark at you' — Welsh sarcasm for someone getting above their station.
You get me? (rhyming 'understand?').
To lose your composure — get wildly excited, blown away, or come unglued.
Super-charged lane creeps you earn for wiping all of the enemy's barracks.
A neutral camp you beat up to recruit mercs that push a lane for you.
The Fall Guys obstacle round you scramble up while elimination slime rises beneath you.
A downward-launching hit you can sometimes jump out of, unlike a true spike.
An input that only works if you hit it on one exact frame.
Twitch hype chant with an arms-up emoticon, born from Imaqtpie's Heimerdinger.
Acting online like the world is a film and you're the lead everyone tuned in to watch.
Reply with a screenshot of someone's old contradictory post to expose them.
A devastating reply telling someone their tweet was so bad they should quit the platform.
Porn-addicted wojak archetype, weaponised in chat as 'you watch too much of that.'
Iconic broken-English meme line from the 1991 Mega Drive game Zero Wing.
If you go looking for trouble, don't act surprised when you find it.
Your bits, bobs, knick-knacks and clutter — Black Country for 'stuff'.
Someone who melts your head. A walking migraine.
Conversational opener — 'listen, I want to ask you something'.
Affectionate Irish 'no way!' / 'stop messing'.
Bay Area tag for 'you know what I mean?'
Emphatic New Orleans agreement — the canonical Yat affirmation.
A fancy overseas whip — your Benz, your Bentley, your Bimmer.
Houston, named for the ten-plus bayous that vein the city.