- word to autre orthographe
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A verbal stamp of truth, usually referencing someone or something meaningful. It’s like swearing on your mum, but urban, stylish, and occasionally chaotic. If someone says “word to,” they mean business.
“Word to my kicks, I'm not going back to that club.”
truth
- no kizzy nokizzy autre orthographe
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Basically “no lie,” but with that extra rap flair that makes everything sound like it belongs in a studio ad-lib. It’s a reassurance that what you're saying is legit, no cap, no exaggeration — just raw truth dipped in swagger.
“Studio rent’s crazy, no kizzy — my mic is the only thing paid on time.”
- no-cap no cap, cap autre orthographe
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In modern slang, “cap” refers to a lie or exaggeration, while “no cap” signals sincerity—often delivered with the urgency of someone who has been accused of lying too many times. The phrase has roots in AAVE and gained widespread attention through trap music and online culture. Saying “no cap” emphasizes truthfulness, whereas calling “cap” exposes nonsense with surgical precision. It’s a linguistic lie detector, portable and brutally effective.
“No cap, that class was way harder than expected.”
- for real autre orthographe
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A reality check disguised as a phrase. Used to confirm truth, express disbelief, or emphasize how done you are.
“You liked that movie? For real?”
- no-cap no cap, cap autre orthographe
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Used to confirm you’re being dead serious. Saying ‘no cap’ means you left your lies at home today. Saying just ‘cap’ means the opposite—you’re calling someone out for chatting pure fiction.
“No cap, that exam ended me spiritually.”
