A term used in comment sections of social media. If you say "ratio" on a post then you get more likes than the original post then you won the ratio. If they said ratio and got more likes then you lose the ratio. When you win a ratio people will reply W but when you lose people with reply L. A ratio can also apply when you make a post and you get more replies than likes then you got ratioed. You can also ratio people in comments if someone makes a comment then you reply ratio and get more likes you won the ratio and vise versa. Ratios can also be incorporated into sentences if someone says something like I need to go to sleep you say things like this ratio needs to sleep so when someone says something just make a sentence with that they said but with ratio in it.
by Cudlyyy July 17, 2021
Basically wanting more likes then the comment/post that you disagree with but not winning a argument
L-Lost
W-Won
L-Lost
W-Won
by Lilililililio March 01, 2021
A comeback that clout chasers use when someone on Twitter says something low IQ to get easy likes because they grew up without a father, got bullied in school a lot, and got no ass whatsoever. They live in their mother's basement consuming nothing but Doritos and Mountain Dew and spending their lonely days watching Belle Delphine's Onlyfans.
by AnonymousUser21 April 15, 2021
by fart69bruh April 16, 2021
(informal)
verb // past tense: ratio'd; progressive tense: ratioing; singular: ratios
Get more replies than retweets or likes on a post on social media (most commonly Twitter), which likely implies that the post should get more dislikes.
verb // past tense: ratio'd; progressive tense: ratioing; singular: ratios
Get more replies than retweets or likes on a post on social media (most commonly Twitter), which likely implies that the post should get more dislikes.
by Summer Vacation March 13, 2021
An annoying term that originates on the toxic waste dump of a site known as Twitter, where a person would reply or retweet an image or video on something they believe is bad, and supposedly, their post is supposed to get more likes, retweets, and/or comments than the post they are replying to or retweeting, hence the name "ratio".
by That2000'sKid October 16, 2020
Ratio is said when a reply gets more likes than the original tweet. But it's also used when someone is making fun of someone as a joke or otherwise. People tend to use extra words separated with "+" to make it sound funnier or more offensive.
e.g.
*Tweet: National Women's Day is meaningless. (100 likes)
Reply: Misogynistic people like you shouldn't exist. (1000 likes)
Another reply: Ratio (200 likes)
Arguement (Joking manner)
Person 1: I suck at this game bruh
Person 2: Yeah you're ass
Person 3: Ratio + cope
e.g.
*Tweet: National Women's Day is meaningless. (100 likes)
Reply: Misogynistic people like you shouldn't exist. (1000 likes)
Another reply: Ratio (200 likes)
Arguement (Joking manner)
Person 1: I suck at this game bruh
Person 2: Yeah you're ass
Person 3: Ratio + cope
by Bezakos March 11, 2022