erb Идиома
go overboard
do it too much, go off the deep end He goes overboard if he likes a girl - buys her flowers every day.
afterboomer
newspaper slang for a person born between 1965 and 1974 after the baby-boom of 1946 to 1964
bovverboots
Sturdy heavy boots.
derby
Black-American slang for the reference is to the human head as it relates to oral copulation
herbalz
1. marijuana , comes from herbs:"Herbalz in my mouth" -- 3rd Bass (Herbalz in my mouth [1991])
2. semen (mentioned in an interview once by 3rd Bass)
zerbit
to give a full contact rasberry; lips pursed, touched to the flesh of another, and air exhaled at a rapid rate; "Joe happily zerbitted Lisa on the neck"
Going overboard
If you go overboard with something, then you take something too far, or do too much.
Monday morning quarterback
(USA) A Monday morning quarterback is someone who, with the benefit of hindsight, knows what should have been done in a situation.
a chatterbox
someone who talks a lot, but not saying anything important: "She's a bit of a chatterbox at work."
out to verb
try to
"She is out to get revenge now that her husband left her for another woman."
go off the deep end|go|go off|go overboard|overboa
v. phr.,
informal To act excitedly and without careful thinking.
John has gone off the deep end about owning a motorcycle. Mike warned his roommate not to go off the deep end and get married. Some girls go overboard for handsome movie and television actors.
litterbug
n.,
slang,
informal A person who leaves garbage in a public place, such as a park or beach or a street; one who litters.
Don't be a litterbug; keep the city clean!
quarterback sneak|quarterback|sneak
n. A football play in which the quarterback takes the ball from the center and dives straight ahead in an attempt to gain a very short distance.
Johnson took the ball over on a quarterback sneak for a touchdown.
verbal diarrhea|diarrhea|verbal
n. phr. The inability to keep silent; over-talkativeness.
Archibald is a nice guy but he's got verbal diarrhea and he can't shut up for a single minute.
Monday-morning quarterback
Monday-morning quarterback A person who criticizes or passes judgment from a position of hindsight, as in
Ethel was a Monday-morning quarterback about all the personnel changes in her department—she always claimed to have known what was going to happen. This expression, first recorded in 1932, alludes to fans who verbally “replay” Sunday's football game the next day, the
quarterback being the team member who calls the plays.
overboard
overboard see
go overboard.