

The top portion of this outfit is very appropriate, but the length of the skirt is way too short.I recommend knee length or just about the knee.- Hotel & Restaurant Management
#DRIP OUTFIT PROFESSIONAL#


Read various positive and negative comments from various recruiters. The women above are dressed in an array of potential interview dress. Better to use another slang word, like lit, for those situations.ĭon’t get too caught up in yourself, though, or you’ll be called out for being arrogant -for stunting, or “showing off.” It’s a fine line between having the drip and flexin’ too drip.A wide range of clothing styles can be appropriate for women to wear to an interview. You wouldn’t really say you that an event was so drip. The starch on the Agbada 👌🏾 /gLoG7Rgty8ĭrip is especially applied to people’s outfits, if you didn’t catch that. Meanwhile this was taken in October,1977 inside the White House.īefore I forget, peep the dripping Yoruba swag while rocking the black leather shoes. Take a good guess at which Nigerian President was standing next to Jimmy Carter in this picture. This phrase is a favorite of people posting outfit pics on Instagram and Twitter when they feel especially have the drip or are dripping in designer goods. Thanks to Cardi B, drip often appears in the phrase come through dripping, e.g., I came through drippin’ tonight with my red bottoms. Her 2018 hit “Drip” drips with rapper bravado: “Came through drippin’ (drip drip) / Diamonds on my wrist, they drippin’ (ice).

The drip was popularized by the rapper who herself we’ve already seen dripping: Cardi B. Ima say this one time only ! I Don’t Give a Flying Fucc about The Word DRIP ! Or Who ever say Dey created it ! BuT I make HITS and i really put dat Shit On 🤷🏾♂️ No Capp !
#DRIP OUTFIT TV#
However, it might also be a teen TV show from the late 2000s, Zoey 101, that introduced dripping as slang for “cool.” The hip-hop blog HipHopDX claims that the word originates in the 2000s Atlanta rap scene while a 2018 Urban Dictionary entry argues it comes from early 2010s Jersey City, New Jersey slang. Its origin is disputed, including among rappers. Or as Bruno Mars sang on his January 2018 “Finesse (Remix)” with Cardi B: “We out here drippin’ in finesse / ĭrip appears to be a metaphor: You’re dripping with money, designer clothes, or confidence. If you have the drip, it means you have swagger, especially in how you look.
