Results for “trap house”

15 results

Trap
noun

A subgenre of hip-hop, or slang for a place where hustling happens.

#hip-hop#music#aave#street
Trapping
verb

Selling drugs to make money — the grind drill and trap music document.

#american#uk#hip-hop#aave
Trap Money
noun

Cash earned from the hustle or grind — money made the hard way.

#money#cash#aave#hip-hop
The House Down
phrase

An intensifier meaning 'completely' or 'to the max' — she served the house down.

#aave#lgbtq#drag#ballroom
Thirst trap
noun

A deliberately alluring photo posted to attract attention, compliments, or desire.

#gen-z#internet#dating#aave
Carsey
noun

Polari for a toilet, lavatory or house — from Italian 'casa', and the root of Cockney 'khazi'.

#polari#lgbtq#british#heritage
Jalopy
noun

A beat-up, rattletrap old automobile held together by hope and tape.

#1920s#flapper#jazz-age#prohibition
Hardstuck
adjective

Trapped at a rank you can't climb out of no matter how much you grind.

#gaming#gen-z#american#internet
Jebaited
verb

Getting tricked or baited into a trap; a Twitch emote of pro gamer Jebailey.

#gen-z#meme#twitch#emote
Gaff
noun

Home, house, or flat — British and Irish slang for where you live.

#uk#british
Mother
noun

A figure of authority and admiration — the icon everyone looks up to, or the head of a ballroom house.

#aave#lgbtq#ballroom#drag
Budge
noun

A sneak-thief who slipped into houses to steal cloaks and coats off the pegs.

#thieves-cant#cant#historical#british
Drac
noun

Short for a Draco pistol — a popular firearm reference in trap and drill lyrics.

#hip-hop#aave#american#gen-z
Bouse
verb

To drink, in the old cant — and 'bousing ken' was the boozing-house where rogues drank.

#thieves-cant#cant#historical#british
Lattie
noun

Polari for a house, flat or room — your lattie was your private safe space.

#polari#lgbtq#british#heritage