A fork of Rural Dictionary
A phrase with wrong grammar, but it is already widely accepted in the English Language, as it is also widely used in public. The 'what that is' phrase could be used at the end of a question, e.g. Do you know what that is?, but now it could also be used as a single question: What that is?
(Person X doing homework)
Y: What that is?
X: My homework that is.
what now? whatcha gonna do about it?
Yeah, I haven't showered in 3 days.. what of it, biatch?
Another way of saying "what?" or "pardon me"
Synonyms: what, pardon me, say that again, I beg your pardon, I'm sorry?
Person 1- (Says something unintelligible)
Person 2 - What's that?"
Person 1 - I said we should head back now.
Person 2- Oh, alright then
1. A word used when you want someone to clarify a statement
2. A little-known country where they may or may not speak English.
1: mumbles
2: What?
1: I said would you like to go to lunch?
A: What country you from?
B: What?
A: What ain't no country I've ever heard of. Do they speak English in What?
Something Sudo Reboot says due to a complete lack of knowledge in any given subject area.
I'm now installing, 'what is it?' er my er 'what is it?' network driver.
In Hebrew - the past is unchangable, don't look back.
(Extended form of that phrase: What was was - was was.)
A: Once you were so hot - now you look like a cow.
B: leave me in your mother, What was was.
a question, usually, if not always, the question is
"what's up?"
Stew walks up to Quintavius
Stew: "hey"
Quintavius: "What it is?"