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hip-hop

[ US /ˈhɪpˌhɔp/ ]
NOUN
  1. genre of African-American music of the 1980s and 1990s in which rhyming lyrics are chanted to a musical accompaniment; several forms of rap have emerged
  2. an urban youth culture associated with rap music and the fashions of African-American residents of the inner city

How To Use hip-hop In A Sentence

  • Lyndsey Turner's punchy production intercuts scenes with a capella versions of hip-hop, rock and grime numbers, arranged by the musical director James Fortune. Posh; The Empire; Hair
  • Gough's songwriting draws influences from Radiohead and Revolver and Rubber Soul-era Beatles, but with a good deal of folk and a bit of hip-hop, soul and dub thrown in for good measure.
  • Scratching doesn't have to be confined to just hip-hop tracks.
  • Kazzer was a big deal before anybody even knew who he was - in the months preceding the release of his first CD, Pedal to the Metal, he was already on a Canada-wide tour to promote his brand of good-time rock & hip-hop.
  • Hip-hop has long been one of the most fashion-conscious cultural phenomena in America.
  • Hip-hop, cowboy wind, and the wind wind wind, occupation, fur, all-match, hippie, ladies fashion, Korean, Japanese, what is it Fashion is the urban special logo, is a city in the vast city of special psychological needs.
  • Hip-hop rose in urban centers, launched by breakdancers and carried forward by emcees, DJs and graffiti artists.
  • You go into a dimly lit room with hip-hop and R&B music and you punch bags. The Sun
  • A dancer from the hip-hop world would show me pops and boogaloos and all that.
  • It's a British thing... as I understand it, "chav" is kind of similar to the American word "wigger" and is often used to refer to middle-class white kids who wear trainers and track suits and listen to hip-hop music. Dave Smith Evolver gets handy upgrade
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