A phrase with wrong grammar. This phrase is very misleading, as people think it means 'who is that', but in fact it means 'who does it belong to'. But as this phrase is widely used, this type of grammar is already accepted.
(Person X sees newspaper on the shelves)
X: Who that is?
Y: Not me that is.
Z: Me that is.
X: **** you
X: Who that is?
Y: Not me that is.
Z: Me that is.
X: **** you
by 79797979797979 May 26, 2016
A phrase with wrong grammar, originally means 'what is that for', but this is already accepted in the English language.
by 79797979797979 May 25, 2016
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?
by 79797979797979 May 26, 2016
A type of wrong grammar, as it could not be used in a single question: What that mean? This phrase could be used at the end of a question sentence, but there must be an 's' following the 'mean': Do you know what that means? This is already accepted in the English Language, as the phrase is often used in the public.
A: Fk you!
B: What that mean?
C: (Raise his middle finger)
B: What that mean once again?
A: To have sex that mean.
B: What that mean?
C: (Raise his middle finger)
B: What that mean once again?
A: To have sex that mean.
by 79797979797979 May 26, 2016