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Honey you snazzy

A phrase to say to someone who is good-looking.
Person 1: "Honey you snazzy!"
Person 2: "Honey you snazzier though"
by rminter October 14, 2017
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You

ur prob sitting in ur room and searching something some1 texted u bc u didn't understand it
-why do you know
-i can relate
by klinchu December 10, 2019
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You won’t see me crying in my soup

I made my decision, and I stand by it.

I’m so happy to eat alone if those around me do not agree.
I am confident that my decision was for the best,

you won’t see me crying in my soup
by Stupidwords4people February 12, 2022
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how you feel

It Basically addresses one’s stupidity and by asking “how you feel? “ it is the same thing as saying “you feel dumb don’t you ?”
“Ah you caught my nigga, how you feel ?”
by The real definitions of urband November 3, 2021
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You know my bop

The phrase “bop” in this sense is New York-based slang that came out of Black and brown queer communities, especially from the ballroom scene, the hood girlies, and NYC’s underground culture.
• The word “bop” originally meant like a lil’ walk, a lil’ strut — something with sauce. Like “that girl got a bop when she walk.”
• Over time, it morphed into meaning your style, pattern, routine, way of being — especially among gay men, fem boys, and trans girls in NYC. It became a quick, flexible word to describe vibe+reputation+routine all in one.

Think Harlem, Bronx, and Brooklyn. Think girls who walk into a room and don’t have to explain themselves. You just know their bop.

“Bop” refers to someone’s vibe, energy, style, or behavioral pattern.
It’s how someone moves, acts, or carries themselves — their aura. It’s like saying “You know how I do.” or “That’s how I move.”
Common Phrases:
• “You know my bop.”
→ You know how I am / You know how I move / You know the type of time I’m on.
• “I don’t know your bop.”
→ I don’t really know you like that / I don’t know how you move / I don’t trust your vibe yet.
• “That’s not my bop.”
→ That’s not my style / That’s not how I operate / I don’t move like that.
• “I peeped her bop.”
→ I clocked how she moves / I figured out her vibe.

How It’s Used (Examples You Can Steal):
1. When you know your routine is always the same:
“I’m not tryna stay long, you know my bop — I slide in and dip quiet.”
2. When someone is acting brand new:
“Don’t act like you don’t know my bop, I don’t chase no dude.”
3. When you peep someone’s energy:
“Mm… I don’t know her bop, she give me sneaky.”
4. When you decline something that ain’t your vibe:
“Going to that messy ass function? Yeah, that’s not my bop.”

When should YOU use it?

Use it when you’re trying to express:
Confidence in how you move: “You know my bop.”
• Suspicion about someone’s actions: “I don’t know his bop.”
• Setting a boundary: “That’s not even my bop. I don’t argue online.”
Explaining yourself without explaining yourself: “It’s just my bop.”
by Fishymotherdiva June 22, 2025
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You

Look at yourself, you're filthy , look in a mirror!”
I don't have a mirror you foki'n twat!”
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Do you like cherries?

By asking someone “do you like cherries?” you’re asking them if you like girls or not.

This is a reference from the short LGBTmovie “kokaina”.
A tpelqejn qershiat a?
Po. Edhe ty a?
Do you like cherries?
Yes. You?
by Do you like cherries? September 3, 2022
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