This genre is a variety of breakbeat usually featuring psychedelic atmospheres and female vocalists singing in a rock-influenced style.
DJ Vadim, Shine, Neo Treo etc all people associated to Trip Hip
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Like ops, except a hop is only a half-op.
<luser> ops plz.
<op> No.
<luser> hops then?
<op> No.
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To continually jump up and down in first person shooter games to avoid enemy attack in
In Battlefield 2-"You bunny hopping newb, you only killed me because you're jumping around like a pansy!"
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An emerging subculture built around DJ's who have a blog with wild party pictures, do mash-ups that usually involve dirty south and/or Diplomats-related rap, wear designer jeans with retro Nikes, and inhabit a grey area between being a hipster and having "street credibility."
The DJ was on your standard hipster-hop tip... he played some Yin Yang Twinz/Take Me Home Tonight mash-up.
I can't even wear Nike Dunks anymore because I see 20 hipster-hop kids a day wearing them.
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noun; A now-extinct term formerly used in the 1920's to 1950's, referring to a user of illicit drugs such as goof balls or muggles (marijuana). The term is used in the movie "Reefer Madness"
Boy: "These are my new friends, Dad".
Dad: "I want all those damned hop heads off the place, NOW!"
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A technique in Half-Life (mostly CS) that involves excellent timing and coordination. You can gain tremendous speed from these hops and jump extremely far. Usually used by veteran counter-strike players because it used to come in handy to get places fast, and also get away quickly. Must use strafing, jumping, and mouse movements to bunnyhop correctly. This is considered a bug in the coding of HL. Bunny-Hopping is a very hard technique to master but doesn't work that well anymore in most Half-life Mods.
Man that guy bunnyhops so fast!
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Refers to Japanese Hip-hop (Nip from Nippon, the native word for Japan and Hop from Hip-hop) as well as a general reference to any Asian Hip-hop artist or group.
While similar in most ways to western Hip-hop/Rap, many Japanese Hip-hop groups tend use a "softer" mix of R&B, Rock, and Pop music along with multiple MCs and/or vocals. This is due in large part to the lack of an established fan base for "true" Hip-hop/Rap music in Japan, though it is gaining popularity.
Examples of Nip-hop artists: TERIYAKI BOYZ (featured on the F&F: Tokyo Drift OST), Zeebra (considered to be one of the first "true" Japanese rappers), K Dub Shine, Aquarius, RIZE, Rhymester, Dabo, Dragon Ash, Seamo, Back-On, M-flo, Rip-Slyme, three Nation, Home Made Kazoku (their songs are featured in several popular anime titles)
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