A skateboarding flip trick in which the rider hops off the board while moving, runs alongside, then quickly kicking the underside of the deck while also hopping back on. If timed right, the board will flip and land just as the rider lands on the board.
It is typically done by longboarders, as most longboards are impossible to even ollie.
"Went for a shred, hit a sick line on this decent hill: Walk-the-plank to Boneless Fingerflip, then pulled off a crazy Ghostflip while running"
1. (verb) to write an incredible verse for another MC to spit. takes the idea of ghostwriting to another level.
2. (verb) to get away with the most heinous of crimes without any repercussions.
3. (verb) to ghostride the whip down the highway at a speed of at least 60 mph.
4. (noun) the MC name of Isaac "Ghostwhippin' Babies" Lehman.
1. I heard that Jay-Z ghostwrote Still D.R.E for Dr. Dre, but Isaac Lehman was ghostwhippin' babies for Max SG in the studio the other day.
2. Isaac was ghostwhippin' babies, dude. I saw this video where he punched the shit out of this bitch who got on stage while he was spittin', and nobody did anything about it.
3. You think you're tough ghostriding the whip around that church parking lot, let's see you ghostwhip babies.
4. Isaac "Ghostwhippin' Babies" Lehman spit a crazy verse on that new album, 'MAXimum Quality'.
The act of getting into a position requiring responsible actions, and then appearing to cease actively handling those responsibilities. Especially when remaining connected to those responsibilities through a position or title. Distance, privacy, or other factors usually make it unclear to others whether or when ghostshipping has begun and this point becomes hotly debated.
He's been ghostshipping that long-distance relationship with his highschool sweetheart ever since his Spring Break fling.
The famous racecar driver sued the team manager for ghostshipping, since the manager started spending all his time with a female driver he managed and stopped overseeing the main team.
The stock price of the internet company fell as the CEO made poor decisions, but the boardmembers who could have stopped him weren't paying attention, they were just a bunch a sorry-ass layabouts ghostshipping their way to huge, easy quarterly stipends.