The Kendrick Lamar and Drake beef continues to sizzle as both rappers exchange diss tracks; and now, more people (and non-humans) are joining in the discussion.

On Tuesday, Lamar dropped "Euphoria," his brutal diss track aimed at Drake. The six-minute song is in response to the Canadian rapper's two diss tracks -- "Push Ups" and "Taylor Made Freestyle" -- released in April.

The track's scathing bars questioned Drake's legitimacy as a songwriter, his biracial identity, his parenting style and mocked how he allegedly lost a rap battle against Pusha T.

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While other artists had much to say about the new diss track, one unlikely comment stood out -- one from Merriam-Webster.

Yes, that Merriam-Webster -- the dictionary!

The brand's official X account (formerly Twitter) commented on "Euphoria's" music video which showed a snap of the word's definition, seemingly taken from Merriam-Webster's website.

"Dear @MTV, we humbly nominate 'Euphoria' by @kendricklamar for a Video Music Award for 'Best Video Ever,'" the account said.

As if that wasn't witty enough, the dictionary's account followed it up with another post: "We *almost* tagged Drake but..."

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The initial tweet has since gone viral with over 649,000 views, 21,000 likes and 3,400 retweets as of writing.

Other rappers also reacted to the new track, including Drake's other archenemy, Rick Ross.

The 48-year-old rapper trolled Drake who he called a "white boy," suggesting that the 37-year-old should not respond to Lamar and seemingly accept defeat.

"Stop, don't respond. Don't respond," Rick said "Don't do it, don't go write an eight-minute verse."

As of writing, "Euphoria's" official video has over 7.3 million views in just 20 hours.