A phenomenon which occurs when an Asian girl is only exposed to one genre of karaoke music, thereby greatly limiting her vocal talents.
by Craig Caroxter June 11, 2008

by Mitchell G June 15, 2008

by singdanceactlove2000 May 26, 2016

by ssa fo tola teg i (backwards) September 26, 2003

by VonCitizen May 28, 2011

A term in the IT and equipment maintenance industries used to describe a bug or problem reported by a user which, upon inspection, has no detectable cause, is unable to be reproduced, and simply "goes away" without any specific change in the equipment's settings or work done by the person servicing the problem.
This is not a derogatory term and while these problems are annoying and time-consuming the lack of explanation does not automatically place blame on the user.
The term is based on the classic Warner Brothers short, "One Froggy Evening", in which a singing and dancing frog will only perform for the construction worker who found it.
This is not a derogatory term and while these problems are annoying and time-consuming the lack of explanation does not automatically place blame on the user.
The term is based on the classic Warner Brothers short, "One Froggy Evening", in which a singing and dancing frog will only perform for the construction worker who found it.
User: "My computer keeps freezing whenever I try to open <program>, specifically, when <detailed description>"
IT Helpdesk: "OK, I'll come down and have a look."
Much Later
IT Boss: "Did you fix User's problem?"
IT Helpdesk: "I couldn't find any problem, no matter how hard I tried. Guess it was a singing frog."
IT Helpdesk: "OK, I'll come down and have a look."
Much Later
IT Boss: "Did you fix User's problem?"
IT Helpdesk: "I couldn't find any problem, no matter how hard I tried. Guess it was a singing frog."
by dwinter9 July 23, 2012

A style of jazz singing somewhat analogous to beatboxing where you reproduce the sounds of an instrument (often a trumpet, clarinet, or saxophone) with your voice.
(Supposedly skat singing was also used earlier, in rag time, but it became most well known through jazz.)
Well known skat singers include Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Cab Calloway, and Scatman John.
(Supposedly skat singing was also used earlier, in rag time, but it became most well known through jazz.)
Well known skat singers include Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Cab Calloway, and Scatman John.
by Greg Schwartz May 18, 2004
