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J'eat yet 

Did you eat yet= J'eat yet to rednecks
J'eat yet by SlipKnoTSOAD August 29, 2008
Related Words
yeti Yeth yets yetti yetty yetch yete Yettie Yetunde Yeta

d'up yet? 

The quickest and easiest way to enquire as to the current status of the marijuana-cigarette rolling activity. This is a very much shortened version of the phrase "Have you skinned up yet?".
Q: "Fuckin d'up yet?"
A: "Motherfucker its your turn. I d'upped the last fuckin joint!"
d'up yet? by markfuckindupyet January 2, 2005

This was a long word that hopefully wasn't defined by someone in Urban Dictionary yet so don't define it too because I'm the first to define this long word 

WOW, that word was too long, buddy
(Inspired from "this_is_a_very_long_phrase_that_hopefully_is_not_in_any_dictionary" from Minecraft Java Edition 20w14∞ easter egg sections)
This was a long word that hopefully wasn't defined by someone in Urban Dictionary yet so don't define it too because I'm the first to define this long word from this_is_a_very_long_phrase_that_hopefully_is_not_in_any_dictionary

are we in love yet? 

Sort of emo-ish shorthand for "God, I wish I had a girlfriend/boyfriend" and is said randomly at a really slow party or spouted on a whim to the stranger on a bus next to you. (The last one is fuuuuuun!)
Should be used when hyper/drunk/high/or just when you're bored and feel like shaking your best friend up.
(can also be used as a charming pick-up line before youv'e met someone)
bored guy 1"Doood, I'm sooooo bored."
bored Guy 2: "Dood, nothing's going on"

Both sit up, and say at the same time:
"Are we in love yet?"
okay...this is awkward...
are we in love yet? by diabolic! November 28, 2005

Did you eat yet? 

When an Asian parent says this to you.. it means "I Love You" as there is no literal translation for "I Love You" in any Asian languages.
Mom: "Did you eat yet?"
Kid: "Did you eat yet, too mom"
Did you eat yet? by Hashtagtai March 23, 2017
N'yet: a contracted version of the phrase "Not Yet", first popularized in the Greater Toronto Area. Should not be confused with the word Nyet, which is Russian for "No." Always be sure to include the apostrophe, as that's what indicates it's a contraction.
Person 1: "Are you ready to go yet?"
Person 2: "N'yet, just give me a minute!"
N'yet by Fixinit1 November 14, 2018