Yes several
He started rapping when he was 11, he got serious about it when he was 17 and he wrote his first song when he was about 14. His first single was released in 1995. LIES. It was actually 1992 when he was in an underground band called Soul Intent. He started rapping when he was 14, with his uncle Ronnie. Up until 1996, he was just recording random tracks with his friends that can now be seen on Youtube. In 1996, he release "Infinate" his debut album. It didn't do so well, so he tried again with The Slim Shady EP. Dr. Dre listened to the Slim Shady EP. Signed Eminem. And the rest is history.
If you look up the lyrics its a real a word because it's a phrase songs are truthful and that's what makes a good song. check in dictionary if you don't believe me.
Orange is the only word that has no real words that rhyme with it.
The mickey mouse song.
The campfire song from sponge bob
im slim shady yes im the real shady
Nobody as hate is the wrong word to use, people may dislike him though.
The ones from The Marshall Mathers LP (Stan, The Way I Am, The Real Slim Shady), do not censor the "s" word (sh_t), but besides that, every other explicit word or remark is censored.
No, the word "slim" is not an adverb.The word "slim" is an adjective, a verb and a noun.
Mince (et) sombre is a French equivalent of the English word "slim-shady." The pronunciation of the feminine/masculine singular phrase -- which appears most famously as the alter ego of Missouri-born rapper Eminem (born Marshall Bruce Mathers III, October 17, 1972) -- will be "mehs somb" in northerly French and "mehs (sey) som-bruh" in southerly French.
Ominous.
No, it is not an adverb. The word shady is an adjective. The rarely-used adverb form is shadily.
The Luhya word for the the English word 'slim' is "omunyereree".
Probably "slender".
The Latin syllable luc- means light in the sense of the visible energy. The Latin syllable lum- refers to the source of that energy. The Latin syllable lev- refers to light, as the opposite of heavy.
Hinky Fishy Shady
A word made up in a song by Disney. The real longest word in English is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis