frou
1.) A regal character from northern Virginia who is a Notre Dame fanatic. His skin is pallid and his hair is swept to the side in the most Bondish of fashion. His voice is a whispy rasp and is often heard talking about Arsenal FC or his girlfriend Mary, whom he so affectionately calls "Marz". He has been known to blame pornographic screensavers on his roommate after being caught in the act of masturbation. Loves soccer jerseys.
2.) An elegant cat.
2.) An elegant cat.
"Hey! How is Frou?"
"Froushish."
My cat's name is Frou.
Don't be such a frou. Fag.
"Froushish."
My cat's name is Frou.
Don't be such a frou. Fag.
frou frou
Replete with ruffles, lace, or other "girly" attributes. A style of dress or home decoration that includes these elements.
That dress is way too frou frou for Angie's taste; She prefers suits and more professional clothing.
frou frou
a duo from the UK composed of ethereal-voiced Imogen Heap and laptop music maker Guy Sigsworth. their fans are few but widely distributed in the world. they are a close-knit group who enjoy only the best music.
-People think electronic music is cold, Germanic and unfeeling, and that somebody strumming along on an acoustic guitar is heartfelt. That’s rubbish. You can create heartbreaking songs on a laptop, and there’s plenty of music written on an acoustic guitar with no feeling in it at all. Kraftwerk can be seen as the most unemotional band of all time, but I find far more emotion in “Computer Love” than anything Celine Dion has ever recorded. “Neon Lights” is so magical and mysterious. They portray themselves in a very alienated way, but if you listen to the music, there’s plenty of heart in Kraftwerk. -Guy Sigsworth
frou frou
Adjective. Connotes disapproval. Often mistakenly rendered as "foo foo" or "fou fou", etc. It means overly fussy in style, such as clothes, hair, furniture, food, etc. Yelpers use foo foo to describe overly fussy food, like any drink at Starbucks requiring more than three words to order. Its current use is derived from an old word describing the sound made by a silk or taffeta dress as the wearer moves through a room or down stairs. It was used as a noun (the dress material) or a verb (to walk in a dress made of such rustling material), but never as an adjective. It should always be used in a negative sense; nothing the speaker approves of should ever be called "frou frou".
"I cannot imagine what kind of prissy prom queen buys dresses in this shop! Everything is so frou frou!"
frou-frou
a woman's skirt or dress
i saw a girl who was wearing a frou-frou
frou-frou
something or someplace artsy. somewhat highbrow. decadent in a refined manner.
He stopped in at Cafe Uptown and bought what turned out to be a very frou-frou mocha, complete with chocolate shavings and orange zest.
frou frou
A variety show popular in Paris and environs from the about 1870s to the 1920s immortalized by the lavish and erotic for their time outfits of the female dancers, which consisted of feathered boas, layered underskirts and ruffly undergarments which were exposed during lively dancing numbers.
See infamous 1900 print 'FROU FROU' by Lucien-Henri Weiluc.