Angel – “Soft and Cunt”:
A Vogue Femme performer with softer and daintier execution.
Arms Control – Hand Performance:
A category solely dedicated to the dexterity and coordination of ones “slight-of-hand” arm and wrist movements; hand tricks and illusions for New Way.
Battle:
When one voguer challenges another, in or out of a ball.
Box Dip:
A floor pose that consists of positioning the forearms flat on the floor, legs over the head, with feet planted on the floor in front.
Cat-walk:
Upright Vogue Femme sashaying.
Clicking:
A contortion involving the arms manipulated up over the head and down behind ones back, keeping the hands locked together.
Devil – “Dramatics”:
A Vogue Femme performer with dramatic and stunt-filled execution.
Dip:
In voguing, a ground-level stunt.
Duck-walk:
Crouching, foot-sliding and scooting movement requiring balance on the balls of the feet. Sashaying in a squatted position.
Hairpin:
From gymnastics, an extreme backbend dip where your butt touches your head.
Hand Performance:
In Vogue Femme style, the illusions, precision and flamboyant interpretation executed through that part of the body; see also Arms Control.
Kansai:
An “Old Way” dip, inspired by a mannequin in a Kansai Yamamoto boutique window (NYC, circa ’70s). Involves one knee on the ground, and a backward lean, supported stylishly by one or both hands.
Locking:
Jerky, tense movement of the body, also Popping; also, in a vogue battle, pinning or restraining an opponent with part of your body while performing.
Lofting:
A dance performed by banji or straight boys that combined voguing arm movements with break dance floor work, named after the now defunct New York dance club where it was practiced (The Loft).
Makevelli:
A variation of the name Machiavelli, naming a “suicide” dip, requiring a fall to the floor, landing on the back, using one leg as a lever; a prat fall.
New Way:
The voguing styles starting in the mid 80′s. Includes Arms Control, with body contortions.
Old Way:
The voguing styles previous to the 80′s. See also Pop, Dip and Spin.
Popping:
Freeze frame, staccato-like movement; jerky, tense movement of the body.
Pop, Dip and Spin:
An earlier name for the dance now called voguing, with a style leaning toward graceful acrobats, and transitions that alternate between standing and floor positions; combined break dance moves with the more feminine hand performance and poses of the earlier drag style. also “Performance”.
Pyramid:
Several voguers performing together, tiered one in front of the other.
Scorpion:
Martial art inspired Old Way dip, requiring a prone position, with one leg dangling over the head.
Shwam!:
Exclaimed by an emcee when a contestant executes a suicide dip. See also Makeveli
Soft & Cunt:
A Vogue Femme performer with softer and daintier execution.
Verbal Vogue:
A category created to test your sharp wit in the art of insults. Contestants are often made to sit in separate chairs and exchange turns at the mic to “roast” each other. Thin-skinned patrons need not apply! Also “Reading”, or “Deadly Daggers”.
Voguing:
A more recent name given to a dance that has been evolving since the late 60′s, created in the New York City Jail (Rikers Island) by the black gay population as a means of entertaining the inmates during holidays. Originally called Presentation, then later Performance, it combined pantomime, dance and modeling moves performed to uptempo R&B music.
Vogueing Femme:
A dance style that takes the femme queen technique and exaggerates it even further: pronounced hip movement, cha-cha-based footwork (often in stocking-feet for maximum slide), peppered with classic striptease gestures. Execution ranges from soft and dainty to dramatic and severe.
Courtesy of http://houseofnaphtali.tripod.com/id3.html. Thank you love.