#violence
74 words tagged “violence”
In a blind spot out of camera and guard view.
A makeshift stabbing weapon — prison-made blade.
To pull out a weapon — usually a blade or strap.
To thrash, beat, or give someone a proper hiding.
Corporal punishment inflicted by inmates on one of their own.
A one-on-one fight with no weapons and no interference.
Skilled at fighting with fists.
A knife — drill-rap slang from 'borer'.
To hit someone — usually one decisive clout.
Either absolutely steaming drunk or absolutely battered — context decides which.
Trouble, violence, or chaos
A bag of weed — or, in drill, a dead rival's body.
Actively looking for violence with rivals.
Driving into enemy territory looking for smoke.
To spray acid at someone. UK drill's grimmest verb.
To stab someone (drawing blood).
One prisoner giving another a beating — as a message.
Killing rivals — or symbolically smoking weed strains named after dead ones. Chief Keef coinage.
A beating with the flat side of a cutlass blade.
To hit something or someone with serious force.
To stab someone — or the blade you do it with.
One who uses violence to carry out a boss's orders.
To stab or shoot a rival.
A shooter, an active gang member — or just a drill rapper.
Mature content — open to view.
Mature content — open to view.
A hidden spot, off camera, where fights are settled.
Going out to commit violence against rivals.
UK drill word for a knife — or to stab.
Stabbing or killing in UK drill — drawing blood.
Stabbed up — knife work, drill-scene shorthand.
A punch to the jaw to test whether someone will fight.
Slashed or stabbed — UK drill onomatopoeia for the sound of a blade.
Hired physical force; strong-arm men, or intimidation itself.
Stabbed — soaked in your own blood.
A punch in the mouth, served up as a threat.
A padlock dropped in a sock and swung as a weapon.
To roll out with the gang to defend an associate, right or wrong.
UK drill term for a knife — specifically one carried for stabbing.
Mouth — or to give someone a proper hammering.