#uk-drill
63 words tagged “uk-drill”
To pull out a weapon — usually a blade or strap.
Your boy. A close male associate in UK drill slang.
Pellets — small wraps of crack, heroin or gear ready to sell.
A dispute, a dramatic mess, a piece of beef worth talking about.
Wearing an electronic ankle monitor on court orders.
A knife — drill-rap slang from 'borer'.
A handgun — UK-drill phrasing that crossed the Atlantic.
Out in the streets — hustling, repping, living the road life.
Drugs — the product you're out selling.
A knife — drill slang named after celeb chef Gordon Ramsay.
A moped. The drill ride-out vehicle of choice.
Logged on the Met Police's gang database.
A gun in UK drill — a strap.
Postcode turf claimed by a gang.
A drug customer — the buyer on the other end of the trap line.
Prison. Also 'wok house' — the jail.
Actively looking for violence with rivals.
To spray acid at someone. UK drill's grimmest verb.
UK street slang for dealing drugs.
Your neighbourhood — or a chunk of drugs over 7g.
'Free' — as in 'free the gang'. The locked-up rallying cry.
Money — pounds, cash, paper.
A zombie knife — serrated, jagged-bladed weapon.
Out of town — usually meaning trapping drugs away from home.
To stab or shoot a rival.
Solid, dependable in the streets — a real one who shows up.
Out-of-town spot where city dealers go to push drugs.
UK drill word for a knife — or to stab.
Money — banknotes with the Queen's face on them.
Stabbing or killing in UK drill — drawing blood.
Slashed or stabbed — UK drill onomatopoeia for the sound of a blade.
Stabbed — soaked in your own blood.
Your neighbourhood — your block, your zone.
UK drill term for a knife — specifically one carried for stabbing.
Crack cocaine — the white side.
Heroin — the brown side of the trap line.
A sawn-off shotgun — Jamaican patois that crossed into UK drill.
A shotgun in UK drill.
Cannabis — specifically the Amnesia Haze strain, by extension any strong weed.
A balaclava.
Masked up so no one can ID you.
A floor level in a prison wing — where your cell door opens onto.
UK drill for stabbed.
Criminal Behaviour Order — the court order that muzzles UK drill artists.
Locked in on violence — actively up to no good.
Driving while armed or holding drugs.
A semi-automatic gun.
Running away. Feet doing the work.
An automatic machine pistol — the Mac-10 or Mac-11.
A grand — £1,000, or a fat stack of cash.
The feds. The police.
A knife in UK drill — the thing that gets you wet.
A drug user — usually a crackhead — calling the line for a fix.
Out of jail but on parole or probation — every move tracked.
Leave London to deal drugs in a smaller town.
Hiding drugs inside your body to smuggle them.
Caught off-guard with no backup and no weapon.
Money — a banknote, named for the Queen on the front.
Driving or roaming the opps' area looking for someone to catch.
A blade. Razor, knife, anything sharp.
Plain-clothes police who leap out of unmarked cars on you.
Weed — cannabis, usually the green you're smoking right now.
A 125cc scooter — drill's preferred ride-out wheels.