you are a mother fucking pimp. meaning you get all the women to grab your shaft and put your genitles in their mouths
so you go to a party and this girl is just like. let me suck your cock. BAAM. This makes you a madda fuckaa pimp!!!
by bizzzmeezyy December 16, 2007
A low rent wannabe pimp. A person who thinks they have nice cloths or have a nice car but they are really just cheap junk.
by Dime Store Pimp June 08, 2011
1.I know you don't want to be with me because everyone tells you that I'm a peanut butter pimp.
2. Any girl that I see can't help but get stuck on me because I'm a peanut butter pimp.
2. Any girl that I see can't help but get stuck on me because I'm a peanut butter pimp.
by mr paul May 04, 2007
One who acts as if they are running thangs! One who lays down the pimp hand in their efforts to make sure one does not get out of pocket. One who clocks many hoes.
I am something like a pimp and I will back hand you if you get out of line, now let me go get my hoes before I hit the club.
by Mia Lanae July 18, 2006
Yo beeyotch!! They tooked my '72 Caddy & added a Landau roof & spinners. That she-it is tight, booyyeeeee!!
by Michael Hunt March 30, 2005
A middle class Columbus, OH based wigger who thinks that adding extra profanity and the word 'bitches' a lot makes him down. He also suggest when a bitch gives you some of that yang, be sure to give her some of that dang. What class - what style.
Pimp Daddy Welfare lives his comfortable middle class existence - when he isnt out pimping or smokin' fatties wit his boyz.
by ManyoMado March 13, 2013
"Hopewell is pimp, yo" is the unofficial slogan for the town of Hopewell Valley, New Jersey.
It was created in the spring of 2005 when high school senior Scotty Orr wore a sweatshirt proclaiming, "Ithaca is gangster" into class. Fellow senior Jon Bershad saw this and, sick of hearing all his fellow classmates talk about how excited they were to go to college and leave Hopewell in the dust, decided to instill a little home town pride in people. Bershad went home and made a t-shirt online which said simply "Hopewell is pimp, yo.".
The shirt came a week later and Bershad was prepared to wear it in the annual Mr. Hoval contest. Unfortunately, a suspension from school got him kicked out of the show. Undaunted he wore it to school the day he got back. The faculty was not really sure whether the slogan was provocative or not ("I don't get it, are you implying we have some kind of prostitution ring in the town"). So as to nip any potential problems in the bud, they told him to change immediately on the grounds that the shirt was offensive to women.
Bershad got his revenge, however. He found a new website and set up an online shop to sell the shirts. They started selling immediately and were soon banned on school grounds by the administration. This only made them sell harder, and to this day the slogan is sold on shirts, hoodies, bumper stickers, mugs, and even the occasional thong underwear.
It was created in the spring of 2005 when high school senior Scotty Orr wore a sweatshirt proclaiming, "Ithaca is gangster" into class. Fellow senior Jon Bershad saw this and, sick of hearing all his fellow classmates talk about how excited they were to go to college and leave Hopewell in the dust, decided to instill a little home town pride in people. Bershad went home and made a t-shirt online which said simply "Hopewell is pimp, yo.".
The shirt came a week later and Bershad was prepared to wear it in the annual Mr. Hoval contest. Unfortunately, a suspension from school got him kicked out of the show. Undaunted he wore it to school the day he got back. The faculty was not really sure whether the slogan was provocative or not ("I don't get it, are you implying we have some kind of prostitution ring in the town"). So as to nip any potential problems in the bud, they told him to change immediately on the grounds that the shirt was offensive to women.
Bershad got his revenge, however. He found a new website and set up an online shop to sell the shirts. They started selling immediately and were soon banned on school grounds by the administration. This only made them sell harder, and to this day the slogan is sold on shirts, hoodies, bumper stickers, mugs, and even the occasional thong underwear.
by Hopewellian August 21, 2006