A fork of Rural Dictionary
1. the modern meaning of the word originates from the game Among Us, it is used for asking someone where they found a dead body 2. or for normal people: in or to what place or position.
1. DEAD BODY REPORTED Blue: where Pink: where Black: where Red: at electrical ... Orange: where 2. A: Hey, where is the bathroom? B: On the end of the hall, to the right
the word 'were' for people who are can't spell/are idiots, but this is a basic and terrible grammar mistake
Where you at the party last night? We where there!
There
Person 1: where is it Person 2: there Person 1: WHERE Person2: THERE After five years they kept of saying where and there, they died doing it, some say their still fighting to this day
(idiom) an informal expression used to express that something has changed--usually for the worse--or that situation has developed into a particular state of affairs Cultural context: "To where (it's)" is an effective and efficient communication tool. However, there is a socio-economic divide regarding it's usage. The expression is most often employed by yokels, commonfolk, and blue collar types. It is rarely used by their highly educated white collar counterparts because the phrase is foreign to some and consciously eschewed by others (e.g. the factions of yuppie douchebags who think their shit don't stink and pedantic stick-up-their-ass intellectuals who cherish proper grammar and strive to speak in paragraph form.)
"to where": The shift supervisor is never satisfied with our production numbers no matter how much we exceed target. It's gotten to where we're asking ourselves why we even try anymore... "to where (it's)": Sure, the Mustang still runs like a raped ape, but sometimes the transmission sticks to where it's nearly impossible to short-shift on the drag strip.
Welsh expression for "where is it?" or "where are you?"
Where is Pete to, or where is the club to
A term used to give an indirect importance to a noun. The word "it" obviously refers to what the person is referring to in general context as in: "The Club? Down two streets, and take a left. On Sherbrooke street is where it's at." But, it can be used when "it" hasn't been specified and the user merely intends to give it prime importance, such as:
"Simple Plan? No way, they suck big cock. The Rasmus is where it's at now."