ebonics for "Who is that?"
Spoken by those of the inner-city. They normally always ask, "Who dat?" before answering the door in case its the MAN.
Spoken by those of the inner-city. They normally always ask, "Who dat?" before answering the door in case its the MAN.
by philly64 September 03, 2006
by Anonymous May 14, 2003
by Mas Puto!! November 16, 2010
A term New Orleans Saints fans use that was stolen from the Cincinnati Bengals who dey chant and changed slightly by unoriginal and lame fans.
A short history of the 2 chants:
1930s: Who Dat used in cartoons completely unfootball related.
1981: Bengals fans create Who Dey chant during Super Bowl season.
1982: LSU starts Who Dat chant in imitation of the Bengals chant.
1983: Saints steal Who Dat chant from LSU.
A short history of the 2 chants:
1930s: Who Dat used in cartoons completely unfootball related.
1981: Bengals fans create Who Dey chant during Super Bowl season.
1982: LSU starts Who Dat chant in imitation of the Bengals chant.
1983: Saints steal Who Dat chant from LSU.
1. Anybody that claims the Saints used "who dat" before the Bengals used "who dey" is ignorant.
2. Who Dey > Who Dat
3. Bengals > Saints
4. The Saints should create their own chant instead of stealing another teams.
2. Who Dey > Who Dat
3. Bengals > Saints
4. The Saints should create their own chant instead of stealing another teams.
by CincyBengalsWhoDey September 28, 2006
Originally used by African American men between the age of 16-30, this phrase is now used by caucasians of the same age group.
-Often used to question the identity of a person.
-Often used to question the identity of a person.
by Mike December 02, 2004
a complete and utter disregard for proper english and respect to the National Football League and its teams. The full phrase is "Who dat said dey gonna beat dem saints?" Its is mostly used by africans and uneducated white folk due to its broken and ebonized dialect.
by guesswho1017 April 11, 2010
by Freedomforcegal September 18, 2017