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    • Lawd. "Lawd" is an alternative spelling of the word "lord" and an expression often associated with Black churchgoers. It is used to express a range of emotions, from sadness to excitement.
    • Brazy. "Brazy" is another word for "crazy," replacing the "c" with a "b." It can also be used to describe someone with great skill or who has accomplished something seemingly impossible.
    • Yass. "Yass" means "yes" and expresses excitement or agreement; on X, it is celebratory slang. Despite its fame on the internet, the expression "yass" has existed since the 1890s, when writer George W. Cable captured a slice of Creole New Orleans in his book "John March, Southerner."
    • Tea. "Tea" is slang for gossip, a juicy scoop, or other personal information. Its first printed use came as early as 1991 in William G. Hawkeswood's "One of the Children: An Ethnography of Identity and Gay Black Men," wherein one of the subjects used the word "tea" to mean "gossip."
  1. Feb 23, 2014 · The Urban Dictionary, a user-generated online dictionary, says the word started life in Atlanta’s Black community as a slang term for a short person before morphing into a term of endearment for just about anybody. Now, hip-hop music has appropriated it as a term for an attractive young lady.

  2. Feb 4, 2005 · She is neither pimp nor prostitute, but a classy and extremely wealthy combination of the two. Pimps and prostitutes work under her. She may sleep with her pimps as she choses, but never in exchange for money (though she pays them to see after her girls), for she is a sexually liberated woman.

  3. Mar 19, 2006 · Title for a woman who owns a brothel. Often one of the most powerful women in the world, a madame frequently has her phD and speaks multiple languages. She is neither pimp nor prostitute, but a classy and extremely wealthy combination of the two. Pimps and prostitutes work under her.

  4. ciel's aunt in black butler. she's a physician and the life of the party. she's got vibrant vermillion hair which she was impartial to until receiving a compliment from her sister's suitor, earl phantomhive. after that, she emphasized her hair with rouged cheeks and scarlet lips, and adorned herself in exorbitant red corset gowns and plumed ...

  5. Definitions of 'madam'. People sometimes say Madam as a very formal and polite way of addressing a woman whose name they do not know. For example, a store clerk might address a woman customer as Madam. [politeness] [...] More.

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  7. The meaning of MADAM is lady —used without a name as a form of respectful or polite address to a woman. How to use madam in a sentence.