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Wutie pronounced (woo-tee) is a term used amongst stock traders when an underlying stock is about to make a large move in price. The term can also be used to describe when a trader is going to place a large outsized trade on a particular stock option.
Amazon has been setting up in a tight squeeze and is about to get "Wutie".
TSLA stock options are cheap and I'm about to get "Wutie" and buy 50 contracts.
wutie by FlowTrade May 14, 2020
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Cutie Wutie 

A phrase that describes my one and only baby girl, Angie.
Angie: Hi !
Me: Hi my little cutie Wutie !
Cutie Wutie by SpanishShrimp July 29, 2022
Related Words

wutizgoin 

A humorous mispronunciation of "What is going on everybody" Uttered by youtuber Dino Rhymestyle and referenced numerous times by the 3 idiots (Dino Rhymestyle, Deion Seereax, and DotoDoya)
wutizgoinevry *chest slap* rhymestyle here!!!!!

wuttt izz goiiinn, wut iz goin'- Deion Seereax directly after the 3 idiots lost to the Androids in a raid in Dragon Ball Fighterz
wutizgoin by Deeznuts1337 June 24, 2021

wukie wukie woo 

It’s means lukie in scooby doo language. It can refer to anyone named Luke or that had the nickname Lukie in general.
“Wukie wukie woo is going CRAZY tbh”
“Did you see wukie yesterday he looked ugly af
wukie wukie woo by Itsul August 7, 2020
Yet another way of saying "whatever". Very abbreviated, very aloof, very annoying. Mostly otaku use this word, as the Japanese pronouce the English "v" as "b".
AIMguy1: You're advice sucks man. I'll ask someone else, douche.
AIMguy2: wutebs lulz
wutebs by Ising February 7, 2010

wuthering 

Adjective. Old English.
A word used to characterize an area where the wind blows so strongly that it makes a terrifying roaring sound.
Used mainly in the 19th century to describe the windy conditions of the weather in England.
Made famous by the classic novel by Emily Brontë, 'Wuthering Heights'. The hostile Yorkshire Moors in the early 19th century provide the setting for the novel. 'Wuthering Heights' is the name of a house on these moors and it is named after the wild weather often experienced in what is today known as 'Brontë Country'.
Person A "It's fair blowing a gail out there."
Person B "Yes, do you that that roraing sound? The wind is blowing so hard, it's wuthering."
wuthering by KMQU December 23, 2011
N. A close friend. Coming from "wardie", a term denoting someone from your ward in New Orleanian slang, "wotie" has taken the place of "homeboy" in modern American hip-hop. Arguments abound around who was the first to introduce it, but considering the origins of the term and that New Orleans is unique in its parish and ward systems, it is most likely from a cresent city artist.
I can't turn my back on him, because he is my wotie.
Wotie by Robyn Labrador-McPherson November 26, 2003