A tight-knit group of 25–30 locals (more or less) who proudly rep their neighborhood. They might hustle, tag, or just move as an all-around street family. Their identity comes from the block’s heartbeat—not headlines or indictments. Most stay off the radar for years, known only to those who live where their name still carries weight.
“That neighborhood crew, the Dexter Boyz, been around forever—I can’t lie, bro. No RICO, no paperwork, but everybody in the city know ‘em.” —Local Detroiter
by RealTalkOnlyFool October 11, 2025
Get the Neighborhood Crewmug. The Rolling 20 Neighborhood Bloods (R20NHB) are a predominately African-American street gang in the West Adams community of South Los Angeles, California. During the 1950s and 60s there was a gang in this area called Blood Alley on Cordova Street near where the Santa Monica Freeway is today that was the predecessor neighborhood to the Rollin 20s Blood. In the early 1970s when black gangs were on the rise, the youth from this neighborhood continued the Blood identity from the previous generation, but it was not related to the Blood identity that grew in the 1970s. Some of the founders of the 20s are O/G Big Red, Al, & Tee Coleman.
by kapalottoobraxzy January 9, 2023
Get the Rolling 20's Neighborhood Bloodsmug. Things work a little different when you're in your own neighborhood versus when you're somewhere you're not from.
There was no greater hypocrisy than someone not from an area/neighborhood trying to run somebody who was from the area/neighborhood off. It began to get highly inflammatory.
by Solid Mantis November 6, 2020
Get the Neighborhoodmug. O look there's Frank the neighborhood nazi
he comes to your door and says papers please and you hand them over then you see him the local klansman Jim waves at you and you have back and say jim.
he comes to your door and says papers please and you hand them over then you see him the local klansman Jim waves at you and you have back and say jim.
by Modere August 8, 2017
Get the neighborhood nazimug. Detroit branch of the LA Rollin’ 40s, mostly around Grand River & Telegraph to 6 Mile (“Parcside Zone”). Allied with Rollin’ 60s, 113 OBC, and Rollin’ 100s; rivals with 5Point Nation, Hyena Crips, 107 Hoovers, and Black P. Stones.
“Graffiti along Grand River shows the 7-Tel Rollin’ 40s Neighborhood Crips claiming their Parcside Zone turf while keeping tabs on 5PN tags.”—Redford local
by RealTalkOnlyFool October 10, 2025
Get the 7-Tel Rollin’ 40s Neighborhood Cripsmug. When someone generalizes your life based on a neighborhood you lived in at one point or another and doesn't take the time to think about that not everyone in a neighborhood does not make the same income, act the same or live in the same type of housing that most in that neighborhood might live in. Neighborhood generalization
Kid 1: where you from?
Kid 2: I'm from Brooklyn but I moved to Westchester when I was 7.
Kid 1: oh Westchester, your so rich.i stayed in the borroughs till I was out of high school.
Kid 2: no actually we had one of the smallest houses in the area and I could not afford half of what the other kids had. My parents did it for the better schools. Btw your house in the city cost more than mine. And you drove a Ferrari. Neighborhood generalization
Kid 2: I'm from Brooklyn but I moved to Westchester when I was 7.
Kid 1: oh Westchester, your so rich.i stayed in the borroughs till I was out of high school.
Kid 2: no actually we had one of the smallest houses in the area and I could not afford half of what the other kids had. My parents did it for the better schools. Btw your house in the city cost more than mine. And you drove a Ferrari. Neighborhood generalization
by moconahhh June 9, 2013
Get the Neighborhood generalizationmug. It's what you say when you see an advertisement for a new development in a part of town that was once cool (see:low rent, dangerous, fun) and you get the hint of dread upon imagining the hoard of NPC yuppies from out of state that will inevitably fill up at least 60% of these polished turd-houses/shit-buildings. ....And all the new traffic that goes along with having several hundred new residents all trying to come and go from the area during certain times of day, in a place without the proper infrastructure to facilitate it.
Someone asks "did you see what they're gonna build down on Gay St?"
You respond (usually prefaced with a sigh that borders on a groan) "Yup. Shame... Here comes the neighborhood"
You respond (usually prefaced with a sigh that borders on a groan) "Yup. Shame... Here comes the neighborhood"
by Dr Plop May 14, 2024
Get the Here comes the neighborhoodmug.