Results for “mommy track”
A slower career path taken to accommodate raising children.
A tracksuit.
Tracksuit pants.
tracksuit / tracksuit pants
Compliment for a woman with a visibly strong, muscular physique.
The main promoted single from an album or release.
When fresh snow has been covered with everyone's tracks.
A DJ or artist's full performance — the run of tracks they play in their slot.
A Liverpool street kid with attitude — tracksuit, swagger, mischief.
A causeway or paved track — Welsh for the kind of road Romans built.
Dublin's word for a chav — tracksuited, gobby, working-class stereotype.
Houston DJ technique — slow the track, chop it up.
The one-bar Showboys loop that powers nearly every New Orleans bounce track.
Out of jail but on parole or probation — every move tracked.
A wheeled excavator, as opposed to a tracked one.
Younger partner in a sugar arrangement who gets money and gifts from a sugar daddy or mommy.
Potential — an unconfirmed sugar daddy/mommy still being vetted.
Mature content — open to view.
Tracking big holders' on-chain moves to anticipate the market.
Song, tune, track
A diss track / lyrical feud (PR)
A non-single album track that isn't actively promoted.
A re-release of an album with a new title track and extras.
A complete studio album, usually around a dozen tracks.
A performance clip with backing track stripped to expose live vocals.
A track released only for online download or streaming.
A song released ahead of the main title track.
Tracking down a Tinder match on Instagram to message them.
Key Performance Indicator: a tracked success metric.
A lane or track
A track mound rolled over rather than jumped.
Fresh, untracked lines in new snow.
Patois pronunciation of 'tune' — a track, especially a banger.
An absolutely fire track — a tune so good it sets the crowd off.
A compliment for someone strikingly beautiful, so good-looking they stop you in your tracks.
Late-night reckless energy — going hard, on a track or in the streets.
A genuinely great, catchy song — if a track is a bop, it goes hard and you can't stop playing it.
An unreleased or unidentified track in a DJ set that fans scramble to name.
The moment a track's tension breaks and the bass and beat slam back in.
Back-to-back — two DJs sharing one set, trading tracks turn by turn.