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Rap Dictionary

Rap Dictionary


 
  1. Benji – 100$ bill.
  2. Funny Money – counterfeit money.
  3. Yard – your house, as in I’m going yard.
  4. Pots of Money – to have alot of cash.
  5. Brass – funny.
  6. hand Bag – money.
  7. Scrilla – cash.
  8. Scrappa – cash.
  9. Dibs/Dibbs – money.
  10. Handbag – money.
  11. Measures – money.
  12. Bag/Bag of Sand – $1000
  13. Flag – $1
  14. Handful – $5
  15. K – $1000
  16. Mill – one million dollars.
  17. Sheckles – money.
  18. Ton – $100
  19. Stack – $1,000
  20. Brick – $200,000 – $250,000 (stacked)
  21. Dough – Multiple stacks (at-least 5-6 stacks)
  22. Bread – $400,000
  23. Good Cash – $1-$5 million
  24. C-Note – $100
  25. Feddie – money.
  26. Cod – large amount of money.
  27. Course Note – a bill larger then $2
  28. High Rollin’ – makin’ money, dealin’ drugs
  29. Yayo – cocaine.
  30. Rack- $1000
  31. kilo- $100,000 too $900,000
  32. mula- money.
  33. Fuck-Fuck.
  34. Blue Cheese – Blue strip on $100 bills.
  35. on grind – making money.
  36. Lit exciting, excellent.
  37. Nuttin’ – ejaculating
  38. Dime – an attractive female.
  39. Deuce – 24 oz beer/✌ sign = leaving.
  40. Chicken head – ratchet female.
  41. Skeet – The ejaculation of sperm.
  42. 69-Head (Oral Sex)of both parties consecutively
  43. Head- Oral Sex
  44. Bitch
  45. Dusty – Girls that look busted up, Unattractive Girl.
  46. Thot- A hoe.
  47. 304- if you type a 304 on a old fashioned calculator, it’ll spell out the word HOE.
  48. Buster- a person who talks too much shit.
  49. Tweeker – a person who does stimulants (usually meth but also sometimes coke or adderall) that can’t keep it together when high.
  50. Tommy- A gun made popular by Al Capone.
  51. Guala – money.
  52. Brodies – homies.
  53. Brodie – homie.

Don’t mortify yourself by saying “fo’ shizzle” to someone from Chicago or by expecting Hi-Tek slang to be recognized outside of the Cincinnati metropolitan area. (No offense, Nati residents.) Rap slang can be as hyper-regional as sports alliances. With the help of M.I.M.’s lyrical breakdown about how each part of the US raps, we created an atlas of five notable words from each region.

East Coast rap

East Coast rap is most famous for its NYC origins—rap as we know it was born in the South Bronx and developed from Queens to Virginia Beach. We could write an article on Wu-Tang’s Staten Island-based lyrical innovations alone; choosing just five words from the East Coast, the birthplace of hip hop, is as challenging as a rose growing through concrete.


C.R.E.A.M.
or Cash Rules Everything Around Me originated in NYC, specifically Staten Island.

In a lyric: “Cash rules everything around me, C.R.E.A.M. Get the money, dollar dollar bill, y’all.”

–Wu Tang Clan, “C.R.E.A.M.”

Everyday use: Should I spend Tuesday night hanging out with my grandma, or picking up extra dog walking shifts? Hmm, C.R.E.A.M.—I’ll choose the paid labor.”


Jiggy 
means fly or cool and originated in NYC, specifically Harlem.

In a lyric: “Let’s get the dough and stay real jiggy.”

–Jay-Z, “Hard Knock Life”

Everyday use: Xavier thought his puffy vest was pretty jiggy, but I think it’s very 2002. In a bad way.


Represent 
means from or exemplifying, and it originated in NYC, specifically Brooklyn.

In a lyric: “What ya throwin on? Biggie Smalls, who you represent?”

–Notorious BIG, “Jeans and Sneakers”

Everyday use: The comedian got the audience hyped by shouting “Brooklyn! Represent, represent!” as soon as she got on stage.


Jawn
 or
joint
are all-purpose nouns originating in Philadelphia.

In a lyric: “I’m golden brown, and you know she’s the joint.”

–Funky 4 + 1, “That’s the Joint”

Everyday use: Let’s go down to that jawn on 4th St. and grab a hoagie.


730
means crazy and originated in NYC (specifically from the city code used when a perp suffers from a mental disorder).

In a lyric: “They say I’m 730, say I spaz out.”

–Foxy Brown, “730”

Everyday use: Julia went 730 when she scuffed her new white sneakers.

West Coast rap

Rap may have started in New York, but California taught it how to chill out and slow down. And, there is no definitive answer to whether LA’s rap terminology is more innovative than the Bay Area’s—Snoop Dogg and E-40 have been there, and the debate ain’t pretty.


Gangsta
means gangster or tough, and it originated in LA.

In a lyric: “Gangsta, gangsta! That’s what they’re yellin.’ It’s not about a salary, it’s all about reality.”

–NWA, “Gangsta Gangsta”

Everyday use: Bobby can pose as pretty gangsta sometimes, but he’s about as soft as they come.

Fo shizzle/fa shizzle means for sure and originated in LA.

In a lyric: “Fa shizzle my nizzle, the big Snoopy D-O-double-jizzle back up in the hizzle.”

–Snoop Dogg, “Suited N Booted”

Everyday use: Hey, want to see a 7:45 movie? Fo shizzle.

Beotch is an insulting or incredulous address, often aimed at a woman, and it originated in Oakland.

In a lyric: “I’ll call her a beotch … beotch!”

–Too $hort, “Call Her a B!tch”

Everyday use: Don’t call someone a beotch—especially a stranger.

Ghostride the whip means to let a car drive itself, and it originated in Vallejo.

In a lyric: “Now let me direct traffic for a minute … ghostride the whip.”

–E-40, “Tell Me When to Go”

Everyday use: There was a sideshow last weekend, and there are still marks on the road from where people were turning donuts and ghostriding the whip.


Gouda
means money and originated in Vallejo.

In a lyric: “Ten racks in a rubber band (gouda), Got three or fo’ mo’ in my other hand (gouda).”

–E-40, “Gouda”

Everyday use: Stefanie blew all her gouda on fixing her car, and then it broke again … immediately.

Southern rap

The South is often referred to as the “dirty South” or the “third coast” of rap. Yet, it—specifically, Houston, Memphis, Atlanta, and New Orleans—has some of the richest and most prolific online record-keeping of their regional terms. Considering that Southern hip hop is a relatively recent genre compared to the Coasts, their library of slang is pretty impressive.


Crunk 
means crazy or drunk, and it originated in Memphis and Atlanta.

In a lyric: “She getting crunk in the club I mean she work.”

–Ying Yang Twins, “Get Low”

Everyday use: Miquila was mortified when her parents came home crunk from the party.


Flossin 
means to show off and originated in Houston.

In a lyric: “What you know about acting bad, flossin’ prowlers? I got seven DVDs, I’m watchin’ Austin Powers.”

–Lil’ Flip, “Texas Boyz (Screwed)”

Everyday use: Chester got a new jacket, and he’s sending everyone selfies, flossin in it.


Lean 
means a type of sizzurp (a Sprite-codine-candy mixture) or the effects of heavy inebriation. It originated in Houston.

In a lyric: “Just pour it in my drink and I’ma sip until I lean hard.”

–Lil Jon, “Me and My Drank”

Everyday use: Sometimes it’s hard to tell if someone is sleeping or just having some heavy lean effects.


Trap house 
means a house where drugs are sold and it originated in Atlanta.

In a lyric: “Bricks going in, bricks going out. Made a hundred thousand in my trap house.”

–Gucci Mane, “Trap House”

Everyday use: Ever since finishing The Wire, Adrian’s been acting like he knows everything about the drug trade, but I doubt he’s even seen a trap house in real life.


Ratchet
means crazy or off-the-hook. It’s often—but not always—used to refer to a woman. It originated in New Orleans and Baton Rouge.

In a lyric: “We all got some rachet in us (erbody, erbody got a lil ratchet).”

–Lil Boosie, “Do the Ratchet”

Everyday use: Ken was naturally offended when someone accused his neighborhood of being rachet.

Midwest rap

The Midwest, which encompasses songs celebrating the toughest aspects of gang life and the softer backpack rap of the Twin Cities, is quite diverse. That’s because we’re including everything that’s not the South, Eastern Seaboard, and Cali in the Midwestern school of hip hop—which admittedly tends to be Chicago-dominated. Here are some Midwestern highlights (and, in the case of ICP, lowlights).


Juke 
means to trick or steal or to grind. It originated in Chicago.

In a lyric: “Back it up like, juke juke, 3, 4, juke juke.”

–Chance the Rapper, “Juke Juke”

Everyday use: I can’t believe you paid $100 for those cheap knockoff Ray-Bans. You’ve been juked, Danielle.


Thot 
means that ho over there and originated in Chicago.

In a lyric: “Okay, you got me—I don’t love no thotties.”

–Chief Keef, “Love No Thotties”

Everyday use: Commenting “THOT” in Instagram is a low blow.


Woo this
 or dismeans so on and so forth and it originated in Chicago.

In a lyric: “They was talking ‘woo this woo wap da bam.’”

–Chance the Rapper, “Angels”

Everyday use: Pras’s verse in “Ghetto Superstar”—”letting bygones be bygones, and so on and so on”—is the 90s version of “woo dis.”


Stan 
means an obsessive fan and originated in Detroit.

In a lyric: “Just to chat, truly yours, your biggest fan, this is Stan.”

–Eminem, “Stan”

Everyday use: Milica is a huge Kevin Durant stan. She has three different KD jerseys—from each of his teams.


Juggalo
or
jugalette 
means an avid Insane Clown Posse fan (male or female). These originated in Detroit.

In a lyric: “Yo, I’m a juggalo, so don’t forget me like you did with Menudo.”

–Insane Clown Posse, “Down with the Clown”

Everyday use: If you admit to being a juggalo, you have to be ready for people to make fun of you for it.

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