W

  WAIL A NOTE ON
  talk to
  "He sad down and he wailed up a note on Ferdinand the First to hip the cat that he's still giggin' for him."
  [ The Gasser ]     +
       
  WAILIN' BOWS
  taking credit for something
  "But digging it harder from afar we cannot take no wailin' bows . . ."
  [ The Gettysburg Address ]
       
  WANGED
  to be given a hard time, put through a lot of changes
  "Your Majesty, I've been billed, willed and twilled, I've been flung, wanged and looned, but I never dug no jazz like this last riff you put me on."
  [ The Gasser ]
       
  WARRIOR STUD
  a soldier
  "He was a warrior stud for Ferdinand the First of Spain."
  [ The Gasser ]
       
  WAX
  recorded music
  ". . . and suck up a little good juice, and listen to some good wax and carry on a little bit . . ."
  [ Bad-Rapping of the Marquis De Sade ]
       
  WHIP
  to do something quickly
  ". . . 'cause he whip out his scratch pad, which the cat always carry with him."
  [ Nero ]
       
  WHITE MICE MIDGET STYLE
  small and insignificant
  ". . . he feels like a disrupted, small, disregarded and unclaimed white mice midget style. . ."
  [ Scrooge ]
 
  WHOLE GIG
  life
  ". . . and we were about to give up the whole gig when we ran into an Indian village."
  [ The Gasser ]
       
  WIG
  a brain, a mind, a head, a face
  "No cat there could dig the stranger's wig."
  [ The Swingin' Pied Piper ]     +
       
  WIG BUBBLE
  an intriguing idea, thought or concept
  "I'd like to do a little creative wig bubble for you . . ."
  [ God's Own Drunk ]
       
  WIG STRETCH
  a very smart person or a complicated discipline that requires great intelligence
  "He proceeded to lay back into the longest good in the history of that far-out wig stretch."
  [ The Hip Einie ]
       
  WIGGAGE
  brain capacity, intelligence level
  "Now here was a cat who carried so much wiggage he was gigless."
  [ The Hip Einie ]
       
  WIGPHONE
  a radio receiver in a helmet
  "He sounds me through the wigphone clear and cool."
  [ Buckley Describes First Jet Ride ]
       
  WILD NON-STOP ETHEREA
  exotic, highly intriguing and indefinite cultural attributes
  ". . . and all the great wild non-stop etherea that is Motha India."
  [ The Hip Gan ]
 
  WILLED
  to be given a hard time, put through a lot of changes
  "Your Majesty, I've been billed, willed and twilled, I've been flung, wanged and looned, but I never dug no jazz like this last riff you put me on."
  [ The Gasser ]
       
  WILLIE THE SHAKE
  William Shakespeare
  "They called him Willie the Shake because he . . . SHOOK! . . . everybody. They give him a nickel's worth of paper and five cents worth of ink and he sat down and wrote up such a breeze, when he got through, that's all there was, Jack, there wasn't no more."
  [ to swing or not to swing ]     +
       
  WINDOWS OF HIS SOUL
  the eyes
  ". . . and he looked right down into the windows of his soul and he say to the little cat, he say "Straighten!""
  [ The Nazz ]
       
  WING
  the arm
  "So she took his wing and started to make it to the pad."
  [ Bad-Rapping of the Marquis De Sade ]
       
  WING-FITTIN' STATION
  death's door
  "And the buddy cat that he's askin' to get straight is in very delicate condition indeed. He is not on the razor's edge; he's on the hone of the scone. That's a wing-fittin' station, y'understand . . ."
  [ The Gasser ]     +
       
  WIPEOUT
  murder
  "And that's how it came to be history of a thing called "The Wipeout of Swingin' Danny McGroo""
  [ The Ballad Of Dan McGroo ]     +
       
  WITH IT
  being in a state of knowing what you are doing
  "Well, I believe the cat's with it all the way."
  [ The Hip Einie ]
 
  WORLD GRABBER
  a politician and/or military person that wants to dominate the world
  "To be a world grabber a stiffer riff must be blown."
  [ Marc Anthony's Funeral Oration ]
       
  WORTHY STUD
  a man with an esteemed public reputation
  "Yea, so are they all worthy studs."
  [ Marc Anthony's Funeral Oration ]