Clay rhymes with gay so it is in fact true with out a doubt. Only use when clay is acting like a Baby Back Bitch.
Clay: youβre mom gay
Daniel: Well clay rhymes with gay so itβs true
Clay:( uncontrollable crying, then complains about his sore ass)
Cockney rhyming slang is a form of English slang which originated in the East End of London. Many of its expressions have passed into common language, and the creation of new ones is no longer restricted to Cockneys.
Rhyming slang developed as a way of obscuring the meaning of sentences to those who did not understand the slang, though it remains a matter of speculation whether this was a linguistic accident, or whether it was developed intentionally to assist criminals or to maintain a particular community.
Rhyming slang works by replacing the word to be obscured with the first word of a phrase that rhymes with that word. For instance, "face" would be replaced by "boat", because face rhymes with "boat race". Similarly "feet" becomes "plates" ("plates of meat"), and "money" is "bread" (a very common usage, from "bread and honey"). Sometimes the full phrase is used, for example "Currant Bun" to mean "The Sun" (often referring to the British Tabloid Newspaper of that name). There is no hard and fast rule for this, and you just have to know whether a particular expression is always shortened, never shortened, or can be used either way.
Examples included in definition.
202π 30π
a. Slave narrators reported mock-prayers, mock-sermons, and other parodies of the forms celebrated in church.
b. Aside from religion and its purposes, such secular parodies of sacred texts contained their own stinging elements of truth.
c. All materials of play that is sometimes fun and frivolous, sometimes instructive, sometimes frighteningly reflective of violence of American society.
We raise de wheat,
Dey gib us de corn:
We bake de bread,
When a rapper, poet, Rapper-Poet, or human beatbox with turrets attempts to rhyme a word or phrase, wheather be it original or common to everyone, with the exact same word or phrase. This can either be a sign of a comedic mind, a sign of little to no tallent for rapping, or a sign of a skitzophrenic conniption.
Rhyming word with WORD
it makes the hoes angry
like a hangnail or something
I dunno what makes the hoes angry
A dialect replacing numerous words with phrases that rhyme with the desired outcome, e.g. Dog and Bone = Phone, Trouble and Strife = Wife, Horse and Carriage = Marrage.
Stems from an area in London.
See Also: rhyming slang
Anyway, I was going off to my Pope in Rome, when the old Trouble and Strife's only gone and left the Horse and Carriage and Cat and Mouse and left me a message next to the Dog and Bone on an Alexander the Great up the Apples and Pairs. She's gone of with another fella with a lot of Poppy Red. Made me so Hit List, you know? So I gos and gets meself a Pigs Ear. Not bothered really, just she dragged her huge Kingdom Come off with my Sue Rider!
186π 74π
The combination of two totally unrelated things that, when mixed together, create a retarded hell-spawned abomination of god.
a. "Dude, I've decided to mix my love for hip hop and transformers!"
"Oh god..."
"And I'm calling myself Optimus Rhyme!"
"Oh christ..."
b. "Dude, putting chocolate covered hotdogs on your pizza is a mistake. A Real Optimus Rhyme, dude."
8π 68π
A rapper who supplies dope, or in other words "sick" or "ill", rhymes.
It's a pretty clever spin on the expression "dope dealer," putting a pun on the word "dope" which can mean either drugs (including heroin and crack/cocaine), or it can be complementing something.
Rappers like Andre Nickatina, Mac Dre, and rap groups like RBL Posse are all dope rhyme dealers.
16π 7π