Results for “pop, dip & spin”
The original name for voguing, back when it was all about popping the arms, dropping into dips and spinning between them.
The vogue element where you whip a 360 spin and drop straight into a back-landing dip on the musical accent.
Jerk-dance move where you drop low on the beat.
UK drill term for a knife — specifically one carried for stabbing.
UK drill for stabbed.
A search of your cell by screws looking for contraband.
Slipping hot IPO shares to executives to win their company's banking business.
The dramatic backward drop to the floor on the beat — the real ballroom name, not 'death drop'.
Buying more when the price drops, betting the asset recovers — bargain hunting the red.
Mature content — open to view.
The five core components of Vogue Femme: hands, catwalk, duckwalk, spins & dips, and floor performance.
Older insider name for the dramatic spin-into-dip drop, actually an onomatopoeic crowd cue, not the move's real name.
Fall Guys' giant spinning hammer that launches beans across the map.
Buy the f***ing dip — aggressive instruction to buy on price drops.
That spinning, clammy, about-to-boak feeling after too much.
Cop car — named for the spinning dome lights on top.
The mainstream/Drag Race name for the dip, a backward stunt-fall to the floor; ballroom calls it a misnomer.
A playful spin on 'homie' — your close friend, with extra silliness.
Dancing to the breaks with footwork, spins, and freezes, the raw original form of breakdancing.
Selling at the first dip out of fear — weak hands that fold under any pressure.
To accelerate hard, spinning the tires — or to leave somewhere fast.
So shocked or amazed you're speechless — left gasping by something stunning.
When a tune goes so hard the DJ spins it straight back from the top.