Used at times when you have no strong feeling towards the subject at hand or you simply don't know or care about the subject at all.
Jay: What's 2 plus 2 plus 3 plus 2?
Edward: Shrugs... Yo let's hit up the chicken spot real quick.
Jay: SHRUGZ (sure, why not)
a friend or homie. Despite the way it sounds, this is not the plural form of dawg.
--Whats good, homez ??
--Nothing much, dawgz.
A hoodie is any person that lives or came from the hood (da ghetto)..
This word is also used to describe a typical girl thats from the ghetto i.e. HOOD RATS..
But hood niggas say hoodie as a term of endearment for their peoples that came from their same hood.
-Yall seen dem hoodies shooting dice in da cut back there?? F*ck, I think we back in da ghetto yall..
-Shawty was lookin sexy BUT HELL NO I wasn't trynna wife her!!! That b*tch was a straight up hoodie chick, you nah mean ??
-Yo, we gon pass through Webster Ave real quick n go see my hoodies !!!
A phrase used when you're commenting on the balance of males and females in a room, or lack thereof. Comes from the two slang words bird which is another word for girl and B which is a short version of Bro.
Yo, where the birds and bees at??
W2 does NOT mean "with". Not even close. W2 is an abbreviation for Word2 or Word Too, which are actually short versions of the phrase Word to mother or Word to everything or similar phrases that people say when they are telling nothing but the truth.
People who post on Urban Dictionary are dazed, W2.
Someone who dickrides a person, place, or thing for no apparent reason.
Girls who defend Chris Brown after he beat up Rihanna are some Chris Breezy mascots. Someone who's wearing a California sweatshirt even though they grew up in New York, thats A Cali mascot. Someone who thinks Lil Wayne is the best rapper of all time,You's a damn MASCOT and you need to check out some old school hip hop, you f'n simpleton!!!!
Used when you want to describe something as Ass, Buns, or Cheeks but as an adverb instead. And, unlike the previous words, it can actually be said before the subject of the sentence and not just after it.
-I've been having a cheeky day so far.
-The Raiders played cheeky today!