Results for “Beat Drop”
Makeup applied flawlessly and fully — a face that's beat is perfectly done.
To talk a lot, to run your mouth or chatter away.
To release new music — and as a noun, the moment a beat kicks in and the song explodes.
The moment a track's tension breaks and the bass and beat slam back in.
An instrumental made to sound like a specific artist — and a meme format for 'this gives off ___ energy.'
A Jazz Age layabout, a young man who slept all day and dodged work, the original slacker.
Mature content — open to view.
To spend a large amount of money on something, no flinching.
A hip, affectionate way to address a man — the beatnik equivalent of 'man' or 'dude.'
A beat-up, rattletrap old automobile held together by hope and tape.
To hang out and relax, or to drop a verse, depending on how you're using it.
A young woman — the beatnik counterpart to calling a guy a 'cat.'
A composed, stylish, in-the-know man — the very picture of beatnik cool.
To buy or grab something, especially a hyped drop you've been waiting on.
Buying more when the price drops, betting the asset recovers — bargain hunting the red.
A genuinely jaw-dropping, hype-worthy moment that makes chat lose its mind.
Impressively hard, skilful, and ruthless — high praise for a verse or beat.
A jaw-droppingly glamorous, knockout-gorgeous woman — old-Hollywood energy.
Top-tier near-flawless diamonds — the clarity grade rappers name-drop to flex how clean their ice is.
Pure delusional confidence — claiming you'd beat any opponent or situation no matter how hopeless.
In 'laisse beton', verlan for 'laisse tomber' (drop it / forget it).
An insulated cooler box for keeping your beers and food cold, the beating heart of any Aussie outing.
Leave it, forget it, or let it go — a plea to drop something.
A K-pop group's new release era — not a return from a break, just the next drop.
Wrecked — financially destroyed by a bad trade, or just badly beaten at anything.
Patois for 'dirty' — can mean filthy, an insult, or a sick beat that goes hard.
An instrumental or beat — Jamaican-derived word that runs through UK street music.
To an intense or wild degree — the beat-era way of saying 'a whole lot.'
Asking for trouble — headed straight toward a beating or serious consequences.
A fast heel-toe dance style ravers do to four-on-the-floor electronic beats.
The involuntary scrunched-up face you make when a heavy bass drop hits.
Someone who buys hyped brands and drops just to flex, often chasing clout over real taste.