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Wavy

adj.) To be fly, impressively dressed, attention seeking through the way you're clothed. To wear nice attire.
Damn girl!, that guy Phats over there is so wavy!
by Phat$ Dolla$ May 23, 2008
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Wavy Kid

A materialistic douche bag. Often can be found wearing their cousin's polo shirt with a stolen pair of true religions and a pair of sneakers that took up their mom's entire welfare check. They actually think they're cool because of their stupid slang words that don't make any sense, even to them because they have no mind of their own. They want to be just like today's rappers (all of which suck) and they think life is a music video. Their world revolves around which Jordan's just came out and whether or not they "have dat piff on deck." Some of them can often be found substituting every 'G' for a 'Q' or "getting tatted" even though they're only getting it because all their friends have shitty tattoos and they want to fit in. They make today's generation look bad.
Guy 1: yo i qot dem sneaky foams on deck my niqqa , u tryna buy these shits off me ?

Guy 2: No. What do I look like? A fucking wavy kid? I'd rather spend my money on something useful.
by robro123 December 31, 2010
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Related Words
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New Wave

The longest-lived sub-genre of music. New Wave's roots can be traced back to 1969, when David Bowie first released the song "Space Oddity". In 1973, when Bowie re-released "Space Oddity", the precursor to New Wave, punk rock was born. Throughout the mid-1970's, Punk bands such as The Ramones, Siouxsie & the Banshees, the Sex Pistols and The Clash were discovered. During the disco backlash of 1979 and 1980, Punk rose to the forefront, while other bands like Blondie, Talking Heads, R.E.M., U2 and Devo began what would become the initial New Wave movement, which was capped off in 1981 when Billy Joel mentioned New Wave in the song "It's Still Rock & Roll to Me". During the early 1980's, there was a lot of band evolution taking place, as Bauhaus broke up, reformed as Tones on Tail, then reformed as Love and Rockets, while Mick Jones of The Clash formed Big Audio Dynamite, The Sex Gang Children split in half and became Culture Club, Vince Clarke, formerly of Depeche Mode, formed Yaz and then Erasure, and The English Beat split into bands such as Style Council, Modern English and Fine Young Cannibals. It was during this time, in 1983 and 1984 that New Wave grew to encompass such pop music acts as Madonna, Cyndi Lauper, David Bowie ((who created New Wave to begin with)), Duran Duran and even Huey Lewis & The News. In 1985, New Wave was at it's first peak, as bands such as Tears For Fears, U2, INXS, Berlin and Simple Minds were having hits songs everywhere. In 1986, however, New Wave encountered it's first lull, as hair bands, Genesis and Michael Jackson became hot. The next year, 1987, though, belonged to New Wave as Genesis hit on a New Wave staple: The war song. Bands such as R.E.M., Mike + The Mechanics, Big Audio Dynamite and Love & Rockets followed suit, all having hits dealing with the topic of World War 3. From 1988 to 1992, New Wave shared the spotlight with hair bands, until grunge killed both genres. In 1993, however, New Wave surprisingly resurfaced as Duran Duran, U2 and The Cure all had comeback hits. Throughout the 1990's and early 2000's, the stage was being set for a New Wave revival, which culminated in 2005 with the return of bands like New Order, Depeche Mode, Blondie, The New Cars, Duran Duran, U2, Queen and many others.
There are too many examples of New Wave to list. Some of then are: Fusco (a fusing of funk and Disco that survived the Disco Backlash), New New Wave (The New Wave revival of 2006), the war songs of 1983 and 1987, Pop Wave (during the mid-80's when pop acts like Madonna, Prince and Cyndi Lauper were considered New Wave) and Punk Wave (the predecessor of New Wave, from 1978 to 1981).
by Skylamiat April 24, 2006
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wavey

Outrightly drunk or high, out of one's mind, and the polar opposite of sober.
"Break out that bottle of vodka so we can all get wavey."
by the smitha January 26, 2009
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riding the crimson wave

When a woman is on her period.
Man, I hate riding the crimson wave. I get so bloated. . .
by Synthetikax May 19, 2007
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Wave Check

when a person removes his or her du rag to reveal the most cleanest waves of all time.
Let’s do a Wave Check video tomorrow you have the cleanest waves it will go viral
by Travongotswag January 11, 2019
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No-Wave

No Wave was a short-lived but influential offshoot of punk rock centered in New York City during the late 1970s and early 1980s. The term No Wave was partly a satiric wordplay rejecting the commercial elements of the then-popular New Wave genre, and also a declaration of the music's experimental nature: No Wave music belonged to no fixed style or genre.

In many ways, No Wave is not a clearly definable genre. There is, for example, no fixed harmony as in most rock music and blues music. There are some elements common to many No Wave performers, including abrasive atonal sounds, strong emphasis on repetitive rhythm, and more emphasis on mood and texture than on conventional melody. Lyrics often focused on nihilism and confrontation, or were puzzlingly abstract.

Performers classified as No Wave generally had little music style in common: Various groups drew on such disperate styles as funk, jazz, blues, heavy metal, aleatoric music and punk rock. Mars, Swans and The Static, experimented with extremely loud, droning music that was frequently characterized by repetitive drumbeats and explicitly nihilistic lyrics.

No Wave had an important impact on noise and industrial bands who formed after, like Big Black, Helmet, and Live Skull. Sonic Youth emerged from this scene by creating music-as-art that eventually reached mass audiences and critical acclaim.
The fact that Big Black and Sonic Youth came from this genre is alone enough reason to respect this long lost music form.
by Goobster February 16, 2005
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