by eadmofo April 7, 2005
Indian English for "please reply". Recurring nightmare of sysadmins and ITs dealing with Indians. Usually combined with other indianisms such as do the needful, causing a violent urge to facepalm among native English speakers. May also cause workflow disruption when the topic is about a commit.
by HomuSaya November 25, 2017
When you’re skiing down a breezy blue run and want to practice that switch stance, so you plant a pole and swing ‘er round
I wanted to see who had been left behind, so I deployed the Shepps Revert to get a good look at the boys up on the hill
by wantontom March 2, 2021
To Reply.
by grammarjammer August 25, 2014
Definitions:
'Contact me'
'Get back to me later'
Origins:
Comes from the spanish verb 'revertir' meaning 'to revert (to)', and literally means "revert to me".
Usage:
This can be used in informal speech among friends but also in business letters/conversation.
'Contact me'
'Get back to me later'
Origins:
Comes from the spanish verb 'revertir' meaning 'to revert (to)', and literally means "revert to me".
Usage:
This can be used in informal speech among friends but also in business letters/conversation.
Examples:
(1) In a letter or note:
"If you need any more help, me revirte"
(2) In a telephone conversation:
Person A: "Hi, can you talk?"
Person B: "No, sorry I'm really busy."
Person A: "No problem. Me reverte?"
Person B: "OK, I'll call you later. Bye."
(1) In a letter or note:
"If you need any more help, me revirte"
(2) In a telephone conversation:
Person A: "Hi, can you talk?"
Person B: "No, sorry I'm really busy."
Person A: "No problem. Me reverte?"
Person B: "OK, I'll call you later. Bye."
by Oliver February 16, 2005
After a user added some false information to the Wikipedia article about Fantastic Four, another user undid the edit and left the remark 'revert troll'.
by DanielJJ January 5, 2017
by Revertroster December 17, 2021