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  1. truth be told

    truth be told

    Truth be told is an expression used when someone reveals a fact or opinion they might otherwise hold back or lie about.
  2. Apple Bottoms

    Apple Bottoms

    Apple Bottoms is a brand of jeans founded by hip-hop star Nelly in 2002. Apple Bottom jeans, as the name suggests, are generally designed for women with full hips.
  3. BoE

    BoE is short for Bind on Equip, a phrase used in the online role-playing game World of Warcraft, among others, for items that players can sell but not barter.
  4. LML

    LML is an internet slang acronym standing for, depending on context, laughing mad loud or love my life.
  5. what happens in Vegas

    what happens in Vegas

    When someone wants to escape the consequences of past indiscretions, they may use the saying what happens in Vegas or its fuller form, what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas, alluding to the Nevada city's popular tourism…
  6. 👍 Thumbs Up emoji

    The thumbs-up emoji is used to express assent, approval, or encouragement in digital communications, especially in Western cultures.
  7. vore

    vore

    Vore is a fetish involving being eaten by or eating someone or something, real or imaginary.
  8. expanding brain meme

    expanding brain meme

    The expanding brain meme shows the ironic progression of ideas (from supposedly primitive to more advanced) using a sequence of images depicting various stages of spiritual or mental enlightenment.
  9. coconut head

    Coconut Head

    Coconut Head is a recurring character on the TV show Ned’s Declassified School Survival Guide. Coconut head is also a nickname for people, especially kpop stars, with a hairstyle resembling a bowl cut.
  10. RealmEye

    RealmEye

    RealmEye is an online tool for player information and assessment in the game Realm of the Mad God.
  11. spank bank

    spank bank

    A spank bank is a mental, and less often physical and digital, collection of images or situations stored away to call up later while masturbating.
  12. would you look at that

    would you look at that

    Would you look at that is a rhetorical question or interjection used to variously comment on something surprising, frustrating, puzzling, or enticing as well as something cynically expected or counter to one's expectations.