by I'm a orange 101 September 29, 2020
N plus the '@' sign equal the nick name for a girl with the first three letters N-A-T in her name. Such as:
Natalee
Natalie
Natasha
Natalia
Natalee
Natalie
Natasha
Natalia
"Hey N@, how have you been?"
by TheN@ February 08, 2009
a wasteland of nauseating 'issue-based' teen dramas such as "Moesha", "South of Nowhere", "Miracle's Boys", and worst of all "Degrassi" (with the exception of "Radio Free Roscoe", one of the few escapist teen shows out there but also the BEST!)
you damn Urbandictionary.com users should whine about the unnecessary flood of these stupid moral-of-the-week teen shows on The-N instead of 'Laguna Beach' and MTV! I've heard that 'MTV is for conformist teenyboppers' crap WAY TOO MUCH, and i don't consider myself a fan of MTV.
by KK March 02, 2006
The act of attempting to leave the fast food restaurant In 'n Out, but coming back in after realizing you crave another succulent burger.
by Blatent Lack of Judgement August 04, 2010
"'n"
Pronunciation: n
Function: Part-of-Speech; end-of-Contraction, uncommon, *implies the possesive as it replaces the word 'Own.' Usage effects a hick, rural flavor to speech, best if used sparingly, may convey a sense of appreciation for archaic or pseudoarchaic formulations in English.
Usage: can be used sans apostrophe in conjunction with 'e' following a vowel, where confusion is unlikely.
Pronunciation: n
Function: Part-of-Speech; end-of-Contraction, uncommon, *implies the possesive as it replaces the word 'Own.' Usage effects a hick, rural flavor to speech, best if used sparingly, may convey a sense of appreciation for archaic or pseudoarchaic formulations in English.
Usage: can be used sans apostrophe in conjunction with 'e' following a vowel, where confusion is unlikely.
My'n, Myne: My+OWN, can replace "Mine"
Your'n, Yourn,: Your+OWN, replaces "Yours" as in phrase/designate "You and Yours"
Thy'n, Thyne, replaces "Thine" when it is prefered to yours
'n has limitations, it cannot be contracted with any word, specifically those words which end in a numeral, punctuation or any letter not either a vowel or liquids or the nasals (l, r, m, n.)
NO Yahoo!'n/Yahoo!n/Yahoo!ne
Your'n, Yourn,: Your+OWN, replaces "Yours" as in phrase/designate "You and Yours"
Thy'n, Thyne, replaces "Thine" when it is prefered to yours
'n has limitations, it cannot be contracted with any word, specifically those words which end in a numeral, punctuation or any letter not either a vowel or liquids or the nasals (l, r, m, n.)
NO Yahoo!'n/Yahoo!n/Yahoo!ne
by Adam Hamilton March 29, 2006
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