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yenta claus 

An older and very small jewish lady. I heard she looks like Dr Ruth. Maybe it is Dr Ruth dressed in a blue elf outfit? Any way, I heard sneeks around giving toys to the kids Santa forgets or isn't allowed to give toys to because someone, who never ask us kids first if that was OK or not, won't let him come to our houses because we are jewish. Is that true? Is there a Yenta Claus?
"Here comes Yenta Claus, here comes Yenta Claus driving down Yenta Claus Lane..........."

"Oy, what Joy! Yenta Claus is coming to town!"

"Yes Virginia, there really is a Yenta Claus"

yenta claus by MerryLou_97 September 15, 2006
From Jewish background which means a woman who talks too much and never shuts up. Can be used as Yentering also.
Your girl is such a Yenta. So your girl and her friends are Yentering at Starbucks
Yenta by Cecil Z. November 14, 2005

Yeetastic 

Something so utterly amazing and fantastic, it just makes you say "yeetastic" to replace the word "fantastic"
Dinner with my goldfish last night was rather yeetastic if i do say so myself
Yeetastic by WhiteEvan June 12, 2017

Yenta Claus 

I have a secret; her name is Yenta Claus. My secret brings me toys just like Santa Claus, just different. See, she is Jewish and no one else in the whole wide world knows about her because she is a secret.
I asked Yenta Claus for a new brother.
Yenta Claus by Hanna_97 September 14, 2006
Originally a Jewish woman's name, used for a character created by humorist Jacob Adler and the matchmaker in Fiddler on the Roof. Came to mean, by extension, a gossip or matchmaker. Has also recently come to mean a woman who fits negative stereotypes of urban women. See: characters on Sex and the City.
Samantha is pressuring Ted to propose just because she wants the validation of her yenta friends.
Yenta by Bob519 March 17, 2010
Your local Jewish community services building. Etymology: Yiddish word: Yenta (n./v. A gossip, or busybody), AND Pentagon: n. That big building in DC.

These buildings often contain many bustling agencies with oddly-acronymed names and people busily shuffling about within them.

And, oy, word spreads FAST...
"There's a bake-sale telethon street-fair this Sunday at the Yentagon. You going?"

"Nu, sure. I heard there might even be a fish taouk stand!
Yentagon by Ezra Soiferman January 9, 2004