1. used to form the past-tense of a verb, especially of acronym-based verbs or those ending with otherwise an ‘e’ or one of the vowels<a\e\i\o\u\y> (as ending in ‘-ed’ looks a bit stilted when following an ‘e’), in addition to irregular, non-standard, nonlinear, and ‘created’ verbs.

2. used to form a past-participle (less necessary than is the 1st use).
1. In three swipes of his giant masamune, Sephiroth KO'd sprawny Sora. {Translation = In three swipes of his giant masamune, Sephiroth knocked-out sprawny Sora.}
“Did you get rubberband'd in the head again?” {Translation = “Did you get shot in the head by a rubberband again?”

2. As Joey listened to some now-retro'd 90's music on his car radio, his girlfriend, Karen, went on chitchatting with her bffl Sammy in the backseat.



History of the Suffix: in old times, 'd was used to form the past-tense of ALL verbs, especially in print. Example: Ole Faithful rang'd the City Bell at the stroke of Dawn.
by Victor Van Styn July 21, 2005
Get the 'd mug.
Suffix that can be tagged to any word, making it a verb. Often used by Strongbad in Teen Girl Squad.
360 half claf to boneless...'d.

That guy got totally possum'd.

His face was all like nose'd.
by Evan May June 1, 2005
Get the 'd mug.
a suffix used by geeks in forums and they add it on to a word to try to flame posters and have nothing better to say
topic creator:hey check out this porn site
next poster:banned'd

topic creator:hey i just found this on the internet
next poster:OLD'D
by Dont worry bout it November 29, 2004
Get the 'd mug.
Suffix used for abbreviations that lamers tend to stick onto full words for absolutely no reason.
Don't use "'d" incorrectly. It'll only make you look like a n00b.
by GastonRabbit June 15, 2004
Get the 'd mug.
1. used to form the past-tense of a verb, especially of acronym-based verbs or those ending with otherwise an ‘e’ or one of the vowels<a\e\i\o\u\y> (as ending in ‘-ed’ looks a bit stilted when following an ‘e’), in addition to irregular, non-standard, nonlinear, and ‘created’ verbs.

2. suffix used to form a past-participle (less necessary than is the 1st use).
1. In three swipes of his giant masamune, Sephiroth KO'd sprawny Sora. {Translation = In three swipes of his giant masamune, Sephiroth knocked-out sprawny Sora.}
“Didjuh get rubberband'd in the head again?” {Translation = “Did you get shot in the head by a rubberband again?”

2. As Joey listened to some now-retro'd 90's music on his car radio, his girlfriend, Karen, went on chitchatting with her bffl Sammy in the backseat.



History of the Suffix: in old times, ‘'d’ was used to form the past-tense of ALL verbs, especially in print. Example: Ole Faithful ring'd the City Bell at the stroke of Dawn.
by Victor Van Styn July 25, 2005
Get the 'd mug.
Term often used on cyberspace especially craigslist to denote Drugs and Disease free while seeking a partner
Please be D and D or D&D free
by Prncezz July 19, 2006
Get the D and D or D&D mug.
The creators of Game Of Thrones, David Benioff and D. B. Weiss. Although after the clusterfuck of the last season it is safe to just assume "dumb and dumber"
Jon: Did you see what D and D did to the recent Game of Thrones?

Jaime: It just gets dumb and dumber.
Get the D and D mug.