When in its verb form it has different tenses with different spellings, like any other verb.
(Present) I yeet
(Past/Imperfect) I was yeeting
(Past/Perfect) I yote
(Pluperfect) I have yought
(Future) I will yeet
(Future perfect) I will have yought
Lol, Hubbie was using the word yeet this week and he was like “Yeet me!” And I was like “I can’t, you’re too big.” and he was like “What does Yeet mean?” And our 12 year old was like “It means to throw something” and he was like “Really?” And I was like “Yeah, man.” I did not yeet him but like if had I yeeted him, he would have like been yeeted.
/giphy to heck with grammar
HERE IS THE URBAN DICTIONARY DEFINITION (WITH TENSES):
Yeet is a versatile word that can be used as an exclamation, a verb, or even a noun.
As an exclamation it can be used to express excitement, usually happily but also nervously. (See Ex. 1)
It can also be used as an exclamation of victory. (See Ex. 2)
Or as a battle cry or focus-shout while throwing or hitting something, like “HIII-YA”. (See Ex. #3)
When in its verb form it has different tenses with different spellings, like any other verb.
(Present) I yeet
(Past/Imperfect) I was yeeting
(Past/Perfect) I yote
(Pluperfect) I have yought
(Future) I will yeet
(Future perfect) I will have yought
As a noun, ‘a yeet’ is the action of yeeting. Yeet can also be a feeling or emotion, usually like an adrenaline rush. (see Ex. 1)
The word has a distinct feel, and power to it. To yeet is to give your full power and soul to an action you’re doing. While many believe yeet to be a fairly new concept, it has been around for centuries. Think back to the berserker warriors. They would be so immersed in pushing all their power into their attack that they wouldn’t even register pain, or go into shock, until long after a regular fighter would have passed out. They were true yeeters. A more modern example is the common use of warp speed in science fiction. It’s interstellar yeet. The word ‘yeet’ is really all that is new about this concept, and it is a very useful word indeed.
(Ex. 1)
Dude1: Aw man it’s the last track meet! I’m so pumped! I’m just gonna YEET down that track!
Dude2: Geez I’m nervous. I hope I don’t screw this up…
Dude1: You just gotta get into the feel of it dude! Just get that yeet flowing!
Dude2: Yeah… you’re right! yeet… YEET!
(Ex. 2)
The dude from Ex. 1 just won his race,
Dude: YEEEEEEEET!
(Ex. 3)
A group of brave Mexican vigilantes are rescuing children and their families from gang violence in the south, by leading them across the US border! But alas, a wretched wall stands in their way! If only one of the brave leaders had the strength to break through it…
Suddenly one of them backs up, steps on foot back, holds their fist our straight and charges at the wall like a bolt of lightning!
Badass Mexican: yeeeeEeEeEeEEEEEEEET!
The wall crumbles to the ground, and the families make it to a sanctuary in the Sierra Nevada mountains.
There is no past tense - if there was, it wouldn’t’ve been worth yeeting about in the first place.
According to the Urban Dictionary: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Yeet
When in its verb form it has different tenses with different spellings, like any other verb.
(Present) I yeet
(Past/Imperfect) I was yeeting
(Past/Perfect) I yote
(Pluperfect) I have yought
(Future) I will yeet
(Future perfect) I will have yought
/giphy yeet yote yought
Yeeted.
It’s whatever you want it to be. There is NO official arbiter for the definition/use of words in the English language, unlike French.
I always thought it was yeeted
Definitely Yoted. (source: my eleven year old.)
@SenorYeetz should be answering this question, me thinks.
Is actually yurted.
I presently yeet yesterday I yeeted tommorow I will yote. I hope this helps
@SenorYEETZ there is not yate smh
@SenorYEETZ
And I thought you weren’t going to have yoted on this.
The past tense of ‘yeet’ is coyotes.
It’s “yeeted.”
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/yeet
I never heard this word prior to this weekend. Now it surrounds me. wth.
Lol, Hubbie was using the word yeet this week and he was like “Yeet me!” And I was like “I can’t, you’re too big.” and he was like “What does Yeet mean?” And our 12 year old was like “It means to throw something” and he was like “Really?” And I was like “Yeah, man.” I did not yeet him but like if had I yeeted him, he would have like been yeeted.
/giphy to heck with grammar
This?
/image abdominal snowman yeti
@Kidsandliz The ‘abdominal’ snowman?
@lseeber aka Yeti as in Yeeti Yoti Yati (yes I know bad pun)
@Kidsandliz ha… I got that part…but the ‘abdominal’ instead of ‘abominable’ threw me. Thought something was whooshing past me. lol
@lseeber Oops I missed that misspelling. And I missed it again when you posted. Wasn’t paying attention. I blame the goat.
@Kidsandliz lol… good deal! Since I didn’t know what yeet was… I thought I might have been missing something else there!
@lseeber I didn’t know what one was either, just was being a smart ass (who couldn’t spell) LOL
HERE IS THE URBAN DICTIONARY DEFINITION (WITH TENSES):
Yeet is a versatile word that can be used as an exclamation, a verb, or even a noun.
As an exclamation it can be used to express excitement, usually happily but also nervously. (See Ex. 1)
It can also be used as an exclamation of victory. (See Ex. 2)
Or as a battle cry or focus-shout while throwing or hitting something, like “HIII-YA”. (See Ex. #3)
When in its verb form it has different tenses with different spellings, like any other verb.
(Present) I yeet
(Past/Imperfect) I was yeeting
(Past/Perfect) I yote
(Pluperfect) I have yought
(Future) I will yeet
(Future perfect) I will have yought
As a noun, ‘a yeet’ is the action of yeeting. Yeet can also be a feeling or emotion, usually like an adrenaline rush. (see Ex. 1)
The word has a distinct feel, and power to it. To yeet is to give your full power and soul to an action you’re doing. While many believe yeet to be a fairly new concept, it has been around for centuries. Think back to the berserker warriors. They would be so immersed in pushing all their power into their attack that they wouldn’t even register pain, or go into shock, until long after a regular fighter would have passed out. They were true yeeters. A more modern example is the common use of warp speed in science fiction. It’s interstellar yeet. The word ‘yeet’ is really all that is new about this concept, and it is a very useful word indeed.
(Ex. 1)
Dude1: Aw man it’s the last track meet! I’m so pumped! I’m just gonna YEET down that track!
Dude2: Geez I’m nervous. I hope I don’t screw this up…
Dude1: You just gotta get into the feel of it dude! Just get that yeet flowing!
Dude2: Yeah… you’re right! yeet… YEET!
(Ex. 2)
The dude from Ex. 1 just won his race,
Dude: YEEEEEEEET!
(Ex. 3)
A group of brave Mexican vigilantes are rescuing children and their families from gang violence in the south, by leading them across the US border! But alas, a wretched wall stands in their way! If only one of the brave leaders had the strength to break through it…
Suddenly one of them backs up, steps on foot back, holds their fist our straight and charges at the wall like a bolt of lightning!
Badass Mexican: yeeeeEeEeEeEEEEEEEET!
The wall crumbles to the ground, and the families make it to a sanctuary in the Sierra Nevada mountains.
@IcePopBOD
TLDR: Trump trope.
uff da
butt
@buttholepoop hello. Welcome to Meh. How did you find this site?
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poop?
@RiotDemon we did it!!!
Yikes
Yutes today and their crazy slangs!
Vinny
i know this is necro, but according to my 8 year old, it’s “yeeted”.