Nicki Minaj Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Nicki Minaj. Here they are! All 51 of them:

Strange how someone you once loved can become just another person you once knew.
Nicki Minaj
I believe that life is a prize, but to live doesn't mean you're alive.
Nicki Minaj
You gave me strengh gave me hope for a lifetime.
Nicki Minaj
Dani: Crank it up. Lets get this party started. *I hand Dancer my iPod.* Lor: What is this crap. Where the hell is Hendrix on this thing? Jo: Did you get any Muse? Dani: Muse is something you do Jo: Distrubed is something you are Dancer: And Godsmacked is something you get Lor: Don't you have any Motley Crue or Van Halen? Christian: How about some Flogging Molly? Ryodan: Whats the deal with all the Linkin Park, for fuck's sake. Dancer: Mega has a crush on Chester Jo: You got any Adele? Dani: Got some Nicki Minaj. Ryodan: Somebody kill me now.
Karen Marie Moning (Iced (Fever, #6))
Haters, I'm not your enemy I'm your hero. Cheer up, you should be happy I'm here
Nicki Minaj
Once upon a time there lived a real bad bitch. The fuckin' end.
Nicki Minaj
Good advice I always hated, but lookin back it made me greater.
Nicki Minaj
Dear God, I am only what you made me and I appreciate everything that you gave me, but like, I don't want to do it any more, sort of lost sight of what I'm doing it for.
Nicki Minaj
But had I accepted the pickle juice, I would be drinking pickle juice right now.
Nicki Minaj
I get what I desire, it's my empire
Nicki Minaj
starships were meant to fly
Nicki Minaj
Looking mighty fine, if I do say so myself: red v-neck, dark denim, designer combat boots, and enough testosterone rolling off me to satisfy Nicki Minaj. Pow!
Victoria Scott (The Liberator (Dante Walker, #2))
You a stupid hoe
Nicki Minaj
Defend my honor protect my pride the good advice i always hated but looking back it made me greater .. u make me laugh u make me hoarse from yelling at you and getting at u ...
Nicki Minaj
Why did you envy? Why you go against me? When I got trendy, why you aint commend me? Why when I needed it, why you couldn't lend me? Why you was secretive frontin like you friendly?
Nicki Minaj
Bitches ain't shit, and they ain't sayin' nuthin'. A hundred muthafuckas can't tell me nuthin'.
Nicki Minaj
Anyway, I think I met him sometime before, in a different life or where I record. I mean he was Adam, I think I was Eve, but my vision ends with the apple on the tree
Nicki Minaj
Only one chance one bullet in the gun. This is my life and I only got one, yeah. The safety’s off and I put on her. Oh stick ‘em up, stick ‘em up. Ready to shoot.
Nicki Minaj
You could never understand why I grind like I do Makiyah & Jalani why I grind like I do
Nicki Minaj
Boy you got my heartbeat running away, beating like a drum and it's coming your way..can't you hear that boom, badoom,boom,boom, badoom, boom, bass, he got that super bass.. -(right eyebrow raised)- >>>>>
Nicki Minaj
Anyway I think I met him in the Swai. I was a Geisha, he was a Samurai
Nicki Minaj
You can be the king, but watch the queen conquer.
Nicki Minaj
No I'm not lucky, I'm blessed.
Nicki Minaj
Life is a movie, but there will never be a sequel.
Nicki Minaj
What we're saying — what I'm saying, anyway — is that it's OK to be weird, and maybe your weird is my normal. Who's to say?
Nicki Minaj
I admire the inner peace I found
Nicki Minaj
Dragon-fruit Martini in hand, Simon makes his way towards one of the Star Bar’s few unoccupied seats, which appears to be upholstered in zebra-skin. “Boss Ass Bitch” by Nicki Minaj is pumping from concealed speakers,
Luke Jennings (Codename Villanelle (Killing Eve, #1))
You should never feel afraid to become a piece of art. It’s exhilarating.
Nicki Minaj
Lose Yourself—Eminem Monsters—Shinedown Dear God—XTC Down with the Sickness—Disturbed Love and War—Fleurie Headstrong—Trapt I Want It That Way—Backstreet Boys Sober—Tool Angels Fall—Breaking Benjamin Black is the Soul—Korn Polyamorous—Breaking Benjamin Best Thing I Never Had—Beyoncé Bed of Lies—Nicki Minaj ft Skylar Grey Apologize—Timbaland ft OneRepublic Spastik—Plastikman Basiel—Amelie Lens Oh Bondage! Up Yours!—X Ray Spex Open Your Eyes—Disturbed Bring Me to Life—Evanescence So What—Pink Light My Fire—The Doors
B.B. Reid (Lilac)
Fame is the worst pain known to man. It’s stronger than heroin.
Nicki Minaj
I don't know if the secret of life is to find love, but I do think one of the secrets of life is to embody love.
Nicki Minaj
These B***hes Couldn't Test Me Even If Their Name Was Pop Quiz
Nicki Minaj (title news bible: the truth about ancient titled news)
Let Them Eat My A** Like A Cupcake
Nicki Minaj
Always believe something wonderful is about to happen
Nicki Minaj
Language offers us a surprising, savage terrain full of pockets and peaks. Shakespeare invented words like crazy. Mark Twain wrote in dialect. Muhammad Ali rapped in rhythmic sentences. Junot Diaz mixes Spanish into his sentences like rum into fruit juice. Nicki Minaj spices her lyrics with slang.
Constance Hale (Sin and Syntax: How to Craft Wickedly Effective Prose)
Some would argue that aggressive displays of sexuality by black female performers such as Nicki Minaj and Beyonce are empowering precisely because of historical perceptions of female sexuality and black women's sexuality in America. The idea that women cannot be overt about their sexuality is rooted in sexist notions of female purity. The idea that black women must prove their worth and disprove centuries of propaganda against their sexuality is buying into racism and sexism and making the oppressed responsible for adapting to oppression - instead of demanding that society stop treating women's sexual desires differently from those of men.
Tamara Winfrey Harris (The Sisters Are Alright: Changing the Broken Narrative of Black Women in America)
You gotta be a beast that the only way they will respect you
Nicki Minaj (Fashion Design: U$A FASHION AND BEAUTY (2))
It's not your fault, I'm a bitch, I'm a monster Yes, I'm a beast, and I feast when I conquer But I'm alone on my throne, all these riches I came this way, all this way just to say, ayy This time, won't you save me?
Nicki Minaj (Pink Friday (Exclusive 18-Track Ultimate Version) by Minaj, Nicki (January 1, 2011))
When I am assertive, I’m a bitch. When a man is assertive, he’s a boss. He bossed up. No negative connotation behind ‘bossed up.’ But lots of negative connotation behind being a bitch. [...] When you’re a girl, you have to be everything. You have to be dope at what you do but you have to be super sweet and you have to be sexy and you have to be this, you have to be that, and you have to be nice. It’s like, I can’t be all those things at once. I’m a human being.
Nicki Minaj
And, where white women are slapped down for daring to be sexual, women of color are slapped down for daring to be anything else: Over the course of her career, Nicki Minaj has spoken about abortion rights, the need for female musicians to write their own work, the difficulty of being an assertive woman in a business setting, and the obstacles black women face in being recognized as creative forces. She is the best-selling female rapper of all time, and her success had done a tremendous amount to awaken critical and commercial interest in female voices within a genre that was largely seen (fairly or unfairly) as a man's game before she showed up. Nicki Minaj has done everything in her power to frame herself as a thoughtful black feminist voice, up to and including staging public readings of Maya Angelou poems. And yet, approximately 89 percent of Nicki Minaj's press coverage, outside of the feminist blogosphere, tends to focus on: her butt.
Jude Ellison S. Doyle (Trainwreck: The Women We Love to Hate, Mock, and Fear... and Why)
The University of California, Berkeley, one of ten Universities in California, is in fact about to inaugurate, for the student season 2022-2023, a new course dedicated to rapper and singer, Nicki Minaj, entitled “The Galaxy of Hip-Hop Feminisms.” According to its description, “the constellation of dynamic voices, theories, and productions of underground and mainstream Black feminine rappers who have influenced the origins of Hip-Hop and its ongoing evolution.” It will also examine the “the genealogy and nuance of key Black feminine rappers and theoreticians in the field, practice, and culture of Hip-Hop Feminisms across the Black Diaspora.” Also, very interesting to understand is the “woke” propaganda, which is recommended readings for the course, that even include pornographic material, which come from supposed “Cultural Studies, Hip-Hop Studies, Feminist Studies, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Porn Studies, Media & Film Studies, and Performance Studies.
Leo Lyon Zagami (Confessions of an Illuminati Volume 8: From the Rise of the Antichrist To the Sound of the Devil and the Great Reset)
We go out to be gay. We crave this when once again growing bored with the straight world. I will announce to Famous: I want to be gay this weekend. This carries an ineffable but precise connotation along the lines of white girl wasted. It means we don’t want to, for example, attend a recital of minimalist composition. That’s something we might otherwise do. But when we decide to be gay, we want to dance to ‘Starships’ by Nicki Minaj, and go downhill from there.
Jeremy Atherton Lin (Gay Bar: Why We Went Out)
I'm just being who I am and I guess that's the point. No one will ever 'accept' anything. I think the goal is to not want their acceptance. The goal is to just do you and they'll come around
Nicki Minaj
unforgiving flow and an even more merciless attitude – “Gutter Nicki” as some of her longtime fans refer to that early part of Nicki’s fast-paced career. Safaree Samuels, Nicki’s longtime friend and business partner, said she was not allowing herself to venture beyond. “Before, she was playing it so safe and then when se started to play around with the music a little more, she became free with it,” he said in the E! special documentary on Nicki’s road to stardom. So who is the true Nicki Minaj? Is she schizophrenic? Much has been said about Nicki’s
Isoul Harris (Nicki Minaj: Hip Pop Moments 4 Life)
Apa? WARIA? Iiih, Dennis! Sudah kubilang berapa kali, sih? Aku ini drag queen, darling, bukan waria! Drag queen itu perwujudan Madonna! Glamor, berani, berbahaya! Sementara waria itu ibarat Nicki Minaj berjakun.
Adham T. Fusama (Dead Smokers Club Part 1)
Remix-friendly songs, outsized media personas, and/or status as subcultural icons make artists like Robyn, Rihanna, and Nicki Minaj frequent fixtures on this service as well.
F. Hollis Griffin (Feeling Normal: Sexuality and Media Criticism in the Digital Age)
When I go back to work, will be sick When I go back to work will be fireworks I wanna serve people like there is no tomorrow If someone says Thanks I will kiss her or him (Even though, old folks have no real teeth) With no teeth, there is more room for heart With all my love, I hope me and the elderly never part All this will be consummated when I go back to work… My hope and dreams are so unlimited… When I think about going back to work. It will be like that moment when Proust sipped his tea And at once the vicissitudes of life had become indifferent The disaster became innocuous, the brevity, illusory. Ah, when I go back to work… This sensation has an effect on me Which love has of filling me with a precious essence. Whence could it have come to me, this all-powerful joy? Did Joan of Arc feel it when she kept strong in front of the executioners? Did John the Baptist have this feeling when he says, the time arrived that I must decrease and He must increase. And he was right about it… Did Nicki Minaj feel it when the barbz looked away from Cardi B’s beckons of violence? Did Shawn Mendes keep strong when Justin Beiber feigned ignorance to his existence? We must stay strong in these times, and prove perseverance. For there will be a day that I ought to go back to work And it will be all of me.
Alther&Ali
Celebrities pay to stop by the greenroom, and Ella has pics of herself with her mom and Guy Fieri and John Oliver and Nicki Minaj, although not all at once.
Delilah S. Dawson (The Violence)
Baartman is often seen to symbolize the sexist and racist ways that Black women’s bodies and sexuality are perceived. Big Black bottoms have become synonymous with sex. Black female artists like Nicki Minaj are chastised for showcasing their considerable backsides in service for their own ends. Or they are disrespected: on a 2011 episode of Live with Regis and Kelly, Regis Philbin reached out and patted Minaj’s behind without her consent.8 Meanwhile, Black male artists—including Nelly, whose infamous “Tip Drill” video showed the artist swiping a credit card down the crack of a Black woman’s behind—and White female artists such as Lily Allen, who sings, in “Hard Out Here,” “Don’t need to shake my ass, cause I’ve got a brain” while flanked by Black women shaking their asses, are defended in the name of art … or irony … or … just lighten up. And nonfamous women and girls who happen to walk around in Black bodies every day? Cheryl Contee of Jack & Jill Politics asked five fellow panelists—Black women all—at a 2011 Netroots Nation conference whether they had ever been mistaken for prostitutes. Every hand on the panel went up. Her encounter, Contee says, happened as she left a dentist’s office with her mother following a root canal, looking “deeply unsexy.”9
Tamara Winfrey Harris (The Sisters Are Alright: Changing the Broken Narrative of Black Women in America)
Nicky Minaj singing ‘Bang Bang’, or see Hayley doing her best moves, while he was on a work call. It was one of her favourite retro hits.
Shari Low (One Last Day of Summer)
Double D up hoes, Dolly Parton
Nicki Minaj