by Brickalicious January 17, 2009
when a pussy writes a mean breakup letter and leaves a cd with reference to a specific breakup song
AND/OR
leaving an unexpected emo letter, on a cheap, white plastic lawn chair, by a pool, near a door (often used for entrance and exit), to a home, in a quiet, upper-middle class neighborhood.
AND/OR
expecting the recipient to be a mind-reader and on the same page.
AND/OR
leaving an unexpected emo letter, on a cheap, white plastic lawn chair, by a pool, near a door (often used for entrance and exit), to a home, in a quiet, upper-middle class neighborhood.
AND/OR
expecting the recipient to be a mind-reader and on the same page.
by too complicated, bye bye May 11, 2013
Letter V is my favorite!
by Subscribe to sushi4u2 December 11, 2017
A type of letter that's the opposite of a silent letter. A silent letter is seen, but not pronounced. (an example would be the letter G in SIGN) A eyelent letter is pronounced, but not seen. An example word with an eyelent letter would be CELLO, the musical instrument. It's pronounced as if it were written CHELLO, so the letter H is eyelent.
by JoeMommaSan July 03, 2009
I just handed in my freedom letter!
Woah, how did Warden Bob take it?
I'm not sure, but I'm not gonna wait to find out!
Woah, how did Warden Bob take it?
I'm not sure, but I'm not gonna wait to find out!
by giggilles December 28, 2009
An “internet letter” is a colloquial term commonly used by the elderly when referring to an email. This term makes more sense to people who are unfamiliar with such new-fandangled technologies because the only thing an email really compares to: the traditional written letter. This term is not solely limited to use by the elderly; it can be used by anyone unfamiliar with email, such as those from the third-world, and those from extremely rural parts of the U.S.
My grandson just got me one of them personal computers with the internets already on there. Now, I can send internet letters to all my grandkids.
by Matt Geiger March 14, 2008
by Uncle Boe October 19, 2010