A top is someone who prefers to be the person in control during sex. Tops generally prefer to take a more active role in sex by acting as the person who penetrates, gives oral sex, or does other sexual acts. For people with penises, this can mean wanting to be the person penetrating rather than receiving.
Generally, a bottom is the receiver, a top is the giver, and vers is someone who does both. These terms, while often applied to anal sex, do apply elsewhere, and aren't reserved for men who have sex with men.
“'Munch' is New York slang meaning to perform oral sex on a woman. Similarly, an 'eater' is a person who performs a lot of oral sex,” according to Genius.
nancy (plural nancies) (Britain, US, derogatory, slang, offensive) An effeminate man, especially a homosexual.
(transitive, fandom slang) To gratuitously kill, disempower, or otherwise remove (a character, usually female) from a narrative, often strictly to hurt another character (usually male) and motivate vengeance.
wendy (plural wendies) (derogatory, slang, Britain, particularly northern UK) A wuss; someone who is particularly cowardly. Toughen up, you big wendy.
Noun. unc (plural uncs) (colloquial) uncle quotations ▼
SOH means "Sense of Humor." The abbreviation SOH is used with the meaning "Sense Of Humor." SOH is typically used on dating sites to refer to a personal characteristic either possessed by the poster or sought by them in a match.
(Latin America, slang) clitoris.
BTC — This acronym has two meanings. One stands for Bitcoin, as players can “mine” for Bitcoin in a game called Roblox Bitcoin Miner. The other meaning is simply “because they can.”
(transitive, dialectal) To pilfer; filch; steal. (intransitive, dialectal) To shrink or retire from view; lurk out of sight; skulk.
◊ In U.S. English, fridge is informal, but in British English it is the usual word for a refrigerator.
(slang) Calm, relaxed, easygoing. The teacher is really chill and doesn't care if you use your phone during class.
Like “cool,” “chill” has a long history. In the 1950s “chilling the mark” was criminal slang, meaning to get rid of your victim without them knowing they've been robbed, but the modern usage of chill starts coming around in the 1970s, from Black slang.
The principal historical dictionary of the English language describes fridge as “a colloquial abbreviation for refrigerator,” and says that the “frig” spelling was likely influenced by the brand name Frigidaire.