No cap, this category is bussin fr fr.
you are so f**king gay
Yes, My ret*rded Ass Signed Up
A woman's vagina AKA foul cunt.
A multi-purpose exclamation that works for literally any emotional state, from triumph to tragedy. It's the verbal equivalent of a shrug emoji combined with chaotic energy—meaning everything and nothing simultaneously.
Short for 'Yandere Role Play,' where participants act out scenarios involving obsessive, possessive characters—typically from anime culture. It's the niche roleplay category that makes regular roleplay look well-adjusted by comparison.
Your Mother. Used by Scousers and northerners on Bully Victims, or as a quick comeback to anything or everything. Origin: North west of England in the year '22' when a Scouser known as Smigga, turned to Jesus on his UK tour and asked where he was the night earlier. Jesus said, ''Manchester... it was hell mint'' and being the polite guy he was, he turned and asked back, "you?" Of course he knew he was going to say having intercourse with your mother, so he stopped the little bastard mid-sentence and crippled his nipple with his LASER EYES the reply: "shaggin ya maaaAAAAHHH!" it caught on. True story.
You could look it up
you know what I mean
Your Most Favorite Person
You really think I care
If a person thinks you understand or are familiar with a certain situation, they may send you "YKHII." Most people use YKHII in texts, online messages, and social media.
For example, your friends may be trying to figure out where they should eat, and you text, "ill eat anywhere yall pick so can you do it already? im starving!!!" Or, you might be a tourist in Alabama and a resident asks, "Y'all aren't from around here, are you?" You may also see people spell yall as "y'all" (and "ya'll" if spelled incorrectly).
Reddit's beautifully chaotic contribution to the English language: a deliberately contradictory way to say "no" that's dripping with meme irony. It's the linguistic equivalent of a shrug emoji but make it confusing.
you are a good friend
you got that s**t right
you're quite welcome
Most often, businesses use YTD when discussing their finances. For example, your boss might say "our YTD profits are up 32% over last year." (Which is really good; you must be working hard.) However, you may also see YTD used in discussions of sales, production, stock prices, or progress on one or more projects.
In emails, Y/N stands for "yes or no?" An email that starts or ends with Y/N likely contains a question to which you must answer "Yes" or "No."
More commonly, people abbreviate "your" and "you're" asur, because doing so saves them an extra letter. However, it's yer prerogative to use whichever abbreviation you like best.
The "you go girl" phrase was popular back in the 1990s as a new wave of female empowerment overcame pop culture in the form of women athletes (e.g. theUSWNT) and female pop singers (e.g. the Spice Girls). The saying still resonates in the 2020s, with many millennial women still using it.
Yogurt Jipsu - The Art Of Consuming A Large Amount Og Yogurt In One Sitting At A Fast Pace.
A delightfully sarcastic portmanteau combining 'yawn' and 'fantastic' to describe something spectacularly boring. It's the perfect passive-aggressive descriptor for that three-hour presentation about quarterly metrics or your friend's vacation slideshow. Because sometimes 'boring' just doesn't capture the sheer magnitude of tedium.
A devastatingly elegant breakup phrase that communicates emotional, mental, and spiritual exhaustion without resorting to profanity or lengthy explanations. It's the sophisticated way to tell someone they're a human energy vampire.
You are quite welcome