blue collar boys

those who get their hands dirty doing manual labour or in a division of manufacturing of any kind.
Construction workers are blue collar boys they get dirty doin manual labour
by Thorough worker June 22, 2022
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blue eyed boy

Some one can do no wrong, who is specially treated, especially by an authority figure.
"She won't tell me anything about that, Im her "blue eyed boy".
by Desired and Wanted November 25, 2013
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Blue Coat Boy

Quite attractive and holds the door out for you. Looks quiet and mysterious. Probably has a secret soft side and an amazing taste in music.
DId you see Blue Coat Boy?
Yeah he held the door out for me today and I really wanted to talk to him!
by Avocado Toast ✰ November 06, 2018
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Your Boy Blue

A begging for donations, weed money/bad father that is the definition of a jeffalo/juffalo/juaggahoe/juggahomo. A real burden on society and his family and friends. The creepy drunken uncle of the ICP fanbase
by Jimandthem April 06, 2019
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Little Boy Blue

-taken from the nursery ryhmes of Andrew Dice Clay
"Little Boy Blue... Cuz he needah da money!"
by Muenster Johnson May 29, 2008
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Little Boy Blue

When you stick your finger in someone's butthole and then stick it in their mouth.
Yo, I gave my girl a Little Boy Blue last night and she said "Oh what a good boy am I!"
by NightStalker0812 December 19, 2020
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white boy blues

Used to describe predominantly white musicians co-opting blues music from African American. While often applied to artists that emerged in 60s blues-inspired rock (think Clapton, Mayall, etc), it also covers later artists like Stevie Ray Vaughn and modern day blues stars like Jack White.

As a pejorative, it attacks said white boy's cultural appropriation of the blues, particularly when he/she lacks the disadvantaged background "original" bluesmen came from. In the modern context of music criticism, it can also be levied against blues players obsessed with the technical artifice of blues music (skilled solos etc) instead of a broader sense of musicality. The term is used with particular derision against wealthy individuals playing a musical form centred around suffering and catharsis, with the implication that the said individual lacks soul and self-awareness.

In strictly guitar-playing circles, white boy blues is often used as an insult against players obsessed with the Chicago Blues style; particularly Stevie Ray Vaughn and Eric Clapton. The implication being that such players are either a) playing to themselves in a self-serving manner akin to masturbation, or b) attempting to mirror specific players in a soulless fashion. Again present is a stigma against individuals from wealthier backgrounds, whereby the term "Blues Lawyers" emerges: rich individuals who play the blues (often on pricey equipment) with no self-awareness of sense of irony.
Steve: -plays Pride and Joy-
John: Man quit playing that white boy blues crap!
by The Goat Of Mendes September 15, 2015
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