出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2024/08/21 00:59 UTC 版)
Probably an alteration of hype or hyper. American rapper Keak da Sneak is sometimes credited as coining the word in the 1990s, but no evidence exists to support this and the term is first attested in 2002.
hyphy (comparative hyphier, superlative hyphiest)
hyphy (uncountable)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/06/14 18:03 UTC 版)
The word hyphy (pronounced /ˈhaɪfiː/ hy-fee) is short for "hyperactive." It was created by Bay Area rapper Keak Da Sneak (as well as Mac Dre) when he used the term on an album he recorded in 1994. From the USA Today article: "Every record label was getting at us at that time, but we fumbled the ball," says E-40, whose My Ghetto Report Card entered the Billboard album chart at No. 3 in March. "I hung on like a hubcap in the fast lane along with a few other rappers, and now it's time again. We had a 10-year drought and they went to other regions and were bypassing us like the sand out here. But we're trendsetters, and the rap game without the Bay Area is like old folks without bingo." Although the hyphy movement has just recently seen light in mainstream America, it has been a long standing and evolving culture in the Bay Area. Hyphy can be seen as the San Francisco equivalent to G-Funk in Los Angeles.