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Skrinkly-dingly bop

A word to describe as someone/something better than skrungly, or bungly, spinkleโ€ฆetc.

This song is a skrinkly-dingly bop.
Song examples (Yumpherdinkers celebration song) & (the collector from the owl house theme)

& William afton spring lock

by Skingle January 5, 2023


Diddy bop

The situation at hand. Can also be used as a greeting in place of "whats up?" It must be used by ballers and ballers only. Anyone who uses it that is inbetweenzies will create a very unfortunate diddy bop for themselves.

Wundo:Yo Thabe whats the diddy bop with trey?
Thabe: Hes ballin out of control max.

by Wunderrrrice May 2, 2007

23๐Ÿ‘ 200๐Ÿ‘Ž


B-Bop

The Sport Of Basketball. You may use B-Bop in any sentence where you would use the term basketball.

Let's go B-Bop at the B-Bop courts!

by Eric Reed January 24, 2006

5๐Ÿ‘ 32๐Ÿ‘Ž


chief woogaho bop

To perform a chief woogaho bop, stand behind someone you don't like/don't care about/just generally want to hurt. Clench your fists as tightly as possible and beat your chest once with each hand. You then jump up as high as you possbly can and bring your knuckles down on the very middle of their head, shouting BOP as loud as your lungs will allow you to. This act comes from the (Indianism) sacrifice that the (chief woogaho) used to perform on his girlfriends to let them know their relationship was over.

I wanted to finish with Mel so I gave her a chief woogaho bop

by Don Marco February 20, 2007


bopping your bussy

A definition about liking something so much that you just can't stop thinking, seeing, or listening to it because it's so good. It makes you "bop your bussy".

This song is so good!

Ya, I bet you're bopping your bussy over it.

by eddddggggyyyy October 4, 2017

17๐Ÿ‘ 3๐Ÿ‘Ž


Beep Bop Boo

friday night funkin

Beep Bop Boo Beep Bop Boo Beep Bop Boo Beep Bop Boo

by yako-li April 12, 2021


Bop-type Refrain

An extremely esoteric nickname for cocaine. In the original lyrics to the Cole Porter classic showtune "I Get a Kick Out of You", the second verse begins is "Some get a kick from cocaine". As the years passed, that was changed to "Some like the bop-type refrain" so kids could continue to put on "Anything Goes" as a high-school musical.

People aware of this, wanting to demonstrate their cultural refinement and speak about cocaine, all while avoiding eavesdroppers and self-incrimination, replace the technical name of their drug of choice with "Bop-type Refrain" (or simply "Bop-type", though the later option brings with it a tremendous risk of losing your audience.)

Chris: I'm sick of referring to cocaine as "yatch". It's gone too mainstream.
Kevin: How about "Bop-type Refrain"?
Chris: What the - oh, I get it. I didn't know you were a devotee of musical theater.
Kevin: Eh, I know the Sinatra version.

by Cosmo July 25, 2006

35๐Ÿ‘ 7๐Ÿ‘Ž