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N juice

The undetectable fluid,"juice" that runs through all black people. It is what causes black people to become extremely mad and go on violent rampages. Is easier to be influenced and set off when fried chicken and/or grape drank is near by. These two items act as triggers to help set off N juice
"Dont piss off that black guy or he will release his N juice and go crazy!"

"That Rampage Jackson must have ate a lot of fried chicken and drank a lot of grape drank cause his N juice was off the charts and the nigga went crazy"
by Chrine August 23, 2008
mugGet the N juicemug.

Triple N's

Chad: "Hey are you ready for this year's Triple N's?"
Brock: "Hell yeah my dude! Abstinence is the best way to stay one with God"
by MigsG November 1, 2018
mugGet the Triple N'smug.

n a^o7 !

- n a^o7 !
- I love you too!
by john lp November 16, 2017
mugGet the n a^o7 !mug.

B-N

The abbreviated version of Bloomington-Normal, twin cities in Central Illinois. Also, the name of a tanning salon: B-N Tanning.
How are things in B-N?

Mom, can you make me an appointment at B-N Tanning for after school?
by JessiEn May 17, 2006
mugGet the B-Nmug.

n/r

An abbreviation used in chats or instant messages that means "not really"
by Bane December 21, 2003
mugGet the n/rmug.

N DOT

Any black persons name can be re-named with "N." as the first initial of their name. This association is only to be used to relate the fact that this individual is a nigger or niggerish. This does not apply to a regular black person who acts like a decent member of society... Just someone who is "niggerish." Hence the spoken words of "N DOT", with the DOT reference to a period.
I hate that nigger Barry Bonds, so I refer to him as N.Bonds - I also hate the way Reggie Sanders swings... grrr that lousy N.Sanders, he is not a team player. I call anyone who is niggerish, I call them an N DOT.
by Andy May 26, 2006
mugGet the N DOTmug.

mook (n.)

Seems to have been taken from Caribbean English, in which it is (was) used to refer to a gullible person. The word has since undergone several changes in meaning, so that it now depends on which sense of the word the speaker has been exposed to. It was popularized in Scorsese's "Mean Streets" (1972), but when Johnny calls Jimmy a mook, it causes confusion: "Nobody knows what a mook is" even appears in the script.
mook (n.)
"This type of student, rigorously following a daily assignment schedule and graphing his grades on the wall, is a never common but somewhat frequent phenomenon. The ‘grind’, ‘mook’, or ‘weenie’ superficially seems to satisfy the demands of Yale, but in many ways he is not alive to the spirit of the place."
--Yale Alumni Magazine, Jan. 21, 1958

"Call them knuckleheads or young white guys; Spin magazine lambasted them with the term ‘mooks’, a label that has since been picked up as a badge of honor."
--NY Times Magazine, Aug. 6, 2000: 39/2
by D.R.M. December 7, 2006
mugGet the mook (n.)mug.

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