0 a quality that makes you likely to be accepted by ordinary young people who live in towns and cities because you have the same fashions, styles, interests, culture, or opinions: --
This kind of individual asset involves reputation, what accountants call goodwill, and/or what others call street cred, along with fame, honor, and prestige.
A technique used by some viewers to protect their street cred is to watch the shows ironically instead.
With tidier production than their earlier singles, this manages to sound accessible and radio-friendly without sacrificing its all-important street cred.
A skill system is implemented in the game; players earn street cred during races by driving aggressively.
Street cred always sounds nice but in practice it doesn't open the doors my name opens today, and has done for the past 30 years.
They want to have "street cred".
One of the acid tests of the new deals is whether they have street cred.
The worrying aspect is the "demo-ism"—the wish to take direct action to establish a form of street cred.