"Aye, I'm freal, ight, ight! I dont play that shit."
"That nigga just jumped Jimmy Tang!"
"Damn yo, you right. That cat's freal."
"That nigga just jumped Jimmy Tang!"
"Damn yo, you right. That cat's freal."
by Adam J. J March 26, 2007
Get the Freal mug.Using formal English phonemics, "freal doe" is translated into "for real, though." This phrase can be either said as a question, exclamation, or after what is said to be fact.
"Dude, you know that kegstand champion girl from last night that passed out twenty minutes later? Got her number, freal doe." (A high five may ensue).
"Whoa, DJ AM is dead."
"No way, freal doe?"
"Grandma, I got into Harvard. Freal doe!" (Again, a high five may ensue).
"Whoa, DJ AM is dead."
"No way, freal doe?"
"Grandma, I got into Harvard. Freal doe!" (Again, a high five may ensue).
by notthisyearcubsfans August 30, 2009
Get the Freal doe mug.Related Words
F'real Run • f'realeyz • f'realio • freals • Frealings • freally • frealous • frealdo • Freal'dobruh • Freal doe
by jurahsik June 14, 2003
Get the freals mug.adjective /FREL-uh s/
1. Intolerant of a friend's other friends.
2. Disposed to suspect rivalry or disloyalty when a friend spends time with others in one's absence.
3. Hostile toward a perceived rival or one believed to be the recipient of a friend's attention (if only momentarily).
4. Solicitous, possessive, and vigilant in guarding a friend against all others.
Origin: portmanteau word derived from friend + jealous; Middle English frend (friend), from Old English frēond (friend, lover, relative), cognate with Old Saxon friund, Old High German friunt, Gothic frijōnds, orig. present participle of frēogan, cognate with Gothic frijōn and Old English frēon (to love) and frēo (free) + Middle English jelous, gelos, from Anglo-French gelus, from Vulgar Latin zēlōsus, equivalent to Late Latin zēl (zeal) + ōsus (-ose).
1. Intolerant of a friend's other friends.
2. Disposed to suspect rivalry or disloyalty when a friend spends time with others in one's absence.
3. Hostile toward a perceived rival or one believed to be the recipient of a friend's attention (if only momentarily).
4. Solicitous, possessive, and vigilant in guarding a friend against all others.
Origin: portmanteau word derived from friend + jealous; Middle English frend (friend), from Old English frēond (friend, lover, relative), cognate with Old Saxon friund, Old High German friunt, Gothic frijōnds, orig. present participle of frēogan, cognate with Gothic frijōn and Old English frēon (to love) and frēo (free) + Middle English jelous, gelos, from Anglo-French gelus, from Vulgar Latin zēlōsus, equivalent to Late Latin zēl (zeal) + ōsus (-ose).
Geraldine: I love our selfie! One favor though, don't tag me if you post it.
Anyone else: How come?
Geraldine: You know how frealous Lillie gets... I wanna live!
Anyone else: How come?
Geraldine: You know how frealous Lillie gets... I wanna live!
by alfredog83 January 16, 2015
Get the frealous mug.1.) The combination of "for" and "real" mainly by black people who are too tanked up on fried chicken and Shiltz's Malt Liqour to realize it should be pronounced as two seperate words.
by caucasian jack June 20, 2003
Get the freal mug.by Pattar fue fue May 11, 2015
Get the frealy mug.by Adav51 June 9, 2016
Get the Freal mug.