DeeJay: It's just a little blood
DeeJay: It's just a little seizure
DeeJay: It's just a little heart attack
DeeJay: It's just a little death
DeeJay: It's just a little seizure
DeeJay: It's just a little heart attack
DeeJay: It's just a little death
by kyle11001001001001 July 11, 2010
Get the DeeJay mug.A crazy singer in the dance genre of music. Very popular in the late ninties and early millenium. Hit singles are: 'I Can See It In Your Eyes' and 'Better Off Alone'. Her admiree's are that of the gino population in Toronto,Ontario,Canada.
Yo broooo this Alice Deejay sounds sick, especially when i play it in my Honda Integra! (typical gino's car in the late ninties - and the Honda Civic and Prelude)
by some-random-gino October 18, 2008
Get the Alice Deejay mug.a guy who has a beautiful heart and is extra
extraordinary and has the ability to make
anyone smile on a rainy day.
extraordinary and has the ability to make
anyone smile on a rainy day.
by Jassy21 February 5, 2010
Get the Deeyaygo mug.Brandon and Travis were talking whilst in line at the store but Travis deejayed Brandon after seeing a magazine cover and that really made him upset.
by b-ster January 9, 2011
Get the deejay mug.by George laing March 18, 2008
Get the deekys mug.something that is so weird that you can not describe it. It is worse then freeky! Usually used with an added shudder or horrified look.
by crazysaz May 25, 2006
Get the freeky deeky mug.noun; Dee-Jae.
The phonetic pronunciation of the abbreviation "DJ", which originated with the term "Disk Jockey," from the job description of radio personalities who would "jockey" the "disks" - 45 rpm LP's at first, and later on, CD's - at radio stations. In the early 1970s, with the rise of hip-hop culture and the Universal Zulu Nation, it became synonymous with the practice of "scratching," originated by the DJ Grand Wizard Theodore, of New York City. It is one of the four key elements of hip-hop.
See also MC.
The phonetic pronunciation of the abbreviation "DJ", which originated with the term "Disk Jockey," from the job description of radio personalities who would "jockey" the "disks" - 45 rpm LP's at first, and later on, CD's - at radio stations. In the early 1970s, with the rise of hip-hop culture and the Universal Zulu Nation, it became synonymous with the practice of "scratching," originated by the DJ Grand Wizard Theodore, of New York City. It is one of the four key elements of hip-hop.
See also MC.
by Jason G.L. Chu April 21, 2004
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