Results for “you man dem”
You lot — the plural 'you' in MLE.
That fella over there — no, he's not actually yours.
A young girl — usually a teenager or younger woman.
Brutal reply telling someone they used to be good and aren't anymore.
Plural 'you' — talking to more than one of yer.
Your group of male friends or crew — London slang for "the boys" or a wider group of guys.
Forcing the game's random number generator to give you the outcome you want.
Bending in-game RNG to your will through deliberate inputs.
The random thing you think about way more often than is reasonable.
The girls — the female counterpart to 'mandem,' a group of women.
A UK term for a streetwise young man tied to road culture; can be respect or mockery.
That guy — a vague way to refer to a man whose name you won't say or can't recall.
Mexican way to say 'no way' or 'you're kidding' — pure disbelief.
A scholarly, moody aesthetic of tweed, old libraries, candlelight, classic literature, and gothic university romance.
A straight 1v1, toe-to-toe, no kiting, no tricks — just who hits harder.
Exploiting the game's tick timing to fire off actions faster than normal.
A special-move throw that grabs straight through blocking and shields.
Twitch hype chant with an arms-up emoticon, born from Imaqtpie's Heimerdinger.
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.
The hyper-protective love-interest trope, distilled.
Romance subgenre that leans into the taboo — morally grey leads, violence, dubcon, kidnap plots.
Iconic broken-English meme line from the 1991 Mega Drive game Zero Wing.
Have a word with yourself.
On serious terms — no joking, grown-man business.
Them, those guys — third-person plural.
Us, we — first-person plural.
Address for a shopkeeper or service worker.
A group of girls or female mates.
Nose.
Hands.
Welsh-English tag phrase — 'look here', 'see' — pinned to the end of a sentence.
South Wales (and West Country) way of asking 'where are you?'
'Hark at you' — Welsh sarcasm for someone getting above their station.
'The hell are you talking about?' — slurred into one word.
Memphis 'man' — pronounced with a curl, used like punctuation.
The one-bar Showboys loop that powers nearly every New Orleans bounce track.
Emphatic New Orleans agreement — the canonical Yat affirmation.
An informal unit of volume — roughly what fit in the giant paper sacks from the old Schwegmann's grocery chain.
Houston, named for the ten-plus bayous that vein the city.
One prisoner giving another a beating — as a message.
The cold station — pantry chef handling salads, charcuterie, terrines.
Are you listening to the CB right now?
Liar's Poker nickname for a relentlessly profane Salomon trader.
The person who signals and directs vehicle and crane movements on a construction site.
Plasterer or drywall finisher — the guy slinging joint compound.
When a man explains something condescendingly, often to a woman who already knows it.
Lend me your ears, that is, listen up and pay attention.