Moronic, half-assed spelling or "your" or "you're" used by close-minded, slow chatroom/AOLer individuals who can't type fast enough, and will use the excuse: 'i hav 2 use slang coz i am tokin 2 lots ov pplz unlyk u LOLZ', even though I could talk to several people without using a single abbreviation.
Although these slow-minded turdburglars use it to represent 'u r', or 'you are', it is not spelt the way it would be pronunced. 'Ur' would be pronunced as 'err' or 'uhr', not 'yer' or 'yur'.
by Bastardized Bottomburp July 19, 2003
Well it's not a possessive pronoun. D: It's not that hard to type "your" or "you're". God forbid you take an extra second out of your chatting sessions to spell correctly.
by Casey, the profit of server. November 11, 2004
To remember the correct difference, the apostrophe represents a missing letter (as in the "G" from "Cookin'" and "Goin'") in the case of "You're" it's the missing "A."
As for "Your" it means it belongs to someone or something. (Genetive form. In some ways, the possessive form.)
After committing these to memory, it gets extremely easy to remember without looking it up. Helpful examples:-
"You're" (You are.)
"You're next."
"That place is heavily guarded, you're not going in there, are you?"
"You're dead, wait 'till I get my hands on you."
"When you're there, turn left."
"Your."
"This is your car."
"Your Majesty."
"Let's go to your place."
"Is this your's?"
Both definitions.
"You're going to your wedding and that's that!"
"You're responsible for your mistakes."
"That's your pet and you're going to take care of it, not me!"
As for "Your" it means it belongs to someone or something. (Genetive form. In some ways, the possessive form.)
After committing these to memory, it gets extremely easy to remember without looking it up. Helpful examples:-
"You're" (You are.)
"You're next."
"That place is heavily guarded, you're not going in there, are you?"
"You're dead, wait 'till I get my hands on you."
"When you're there, turn left."
"Your."
"This is your car."
"Your Majesty."
"Let's go to your place."
"Is this your's?"
Both definitions.
"You're going to your wedding and that's that!"
"You're responsible for your mistakes."
"That's your pet and you're going to take care of it, not me!"
by A.F.L June 08, 2006
Ur
by uyx8cr6f0g86g7y September 12, 2010
ur an illiterate redneck
by josh April 25, 2003
by TheCrackBaby April 11, 2020