British Slang
Explore viral phrases related to british slang
12
Phrases
1
Viral
01
bare
How Jamaican Patois became London's amplifier — a word that turned Caribbean abundance into British youth identity.
02
gaff
Your home, but only when you're speaking casually to people you're comfortable with — signals working-class identity over middle-class propriety.
03
wesh
A verbal tap on the shoulder — greeting, attention-getter, or surprise marker that does several conversational jobs at once.
04
peng
An adjective for exceptional quality or attractiveness, carrying immediate recognition rather than measured praise.
05
howzit
A single-word greeting that both says hello and asks how you're doing — South Africa's way of opening every casual conversation with assumed connection.
06
peak
An expression of sympathy for bad luck or misfortune, used casually among friends to acknowledge when something unfortunate happens.
07
innit
A British verbal punctuation mark that turns any statement into a request for agreement or simply marks where your thought ends.
08
mandem
Your tight circle of friends in British slang—the crew you move with, the people who show up when it matters.
09
bogan
An Australian term for someone displaying working-class cultural markers — fashion, music, speech — regardless of how much money they actually have.
10
gegessen
Berlin slang turning "eaten" into a blunt declaration that something is finished, depleted, or no longer available — typical of the city's no-nonsense directness.
11
ibahesh
Amsterdam street slang for police that signals local knowledge—informal vocabulary born from centuries of Hebrew influence on Dutch urban language.
12
mok
Amsterdam's affectionate nickname that marks you as someone who understands the city's history as a refuge, not just its geography.
