To 'eat the frog' is to complete your hardest task first thing, before you complete any other work
To 'yeet the frog' is to put off your hardest task by at least a week by yeeting it into the future.
To 'yeet the frog' is to put off your hardest task by at least a week by yeeting it into the future.
“If it's your job to eat a frog, it's best to do it first thing in the morning; If it's your job to eat two frogs, it's best to yeet the biggest one into next week.” - Yeet the Frog
by xoxoSoph January 24, 2023
Get the yeet the frog mug.1. (verb) To toss something with extreme care. 2. (verb) To successfully toss something onto a precarious edge or side, upon which it is unlikely to land.
"On his forty-seventh try, Billy was able to successfully anti-yeet his used plastic Coca-Cola bottle onto his desk, while filming."
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Get the Snus yeet quit mug.The act of taking something that doesn’t belong to you. It can also relate to to stealing someone’s seat on a couch. Get creative.
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Get the YEET mug.An English verb Etymologically derived from the Latin Verb Iacto, Iactare, Iactaui, Iactum meaning "to throw"
As in the famous phrase attributed by Suetonius to Julius Caesar on 10 January 49 BC : "Iacta alea est." or in english: "The dice has been thrown."
In English the word carries a more emphatic connotation meaning "to throw hard" or "to toss with energy and without care" probably deriving from Caesars famous usage.
One may Exclaim "Yeet" while throwing, or they may also use Yeet as an exclamation of surprise, excitement, or affirmation.
There is a lack of academic consensus about whether the correct past participle of "Yeet" is the regular form of "Yeeted" or alternatively the irregular form for the simple past of "Yote" with the past participle being "Yoted" But the present participle is generally agreed to be "yeeting"
In the singular it has the forms: I Yeet/ am yeeting, You Yeet/ are yeeting, He/she/ it Yeets/ is yeeting. And in the Plural: We Yeet/ are yeeting, Y'all Yeet/are yeeting, They Yeet/ are yeeting.
The past forms I Yeeted/I have Yeeted or I Yote/I have Yoted.
there is also the past participle used in the sense of:
/get Yeeted on/ Get yoted on.
Which is similar to "get dunked on"
As in the famous phrase attributed by Suetonius to Julius Caesar on 10 January 49 BC : "Iacta alea est." or in english: "The dice has been thrown."
In English the word carries a more emphatic connotation meaning "to throw hard" or "to toss with energy and without care" probably deriving from Caesars famous usage.
One may Exclaim "Yeet" while throwing, or they may also use Yeet as an exclamation of surprise, excitement, or affirmation.
There is a lack of academic consensus about whether the correct past participle of "Yeet" is the regular form of "Yeeted" or alternatively the irregular form for the simple past of "Yote" with the past participle being "Yoted" But the present participle is generally agreed to be "yeeting"
In the singular it has the forms: I Yeet/ am yeeting, You Yeet/ are yeeting, He/she/ it Yeets/ is yeeting. And in the Plural: We Yeet/ are yeeting, Y'all Yeet/are yeeting, They Yeet/ are yeeting.
The past forms I Yeeted/I have Yeeted or I Yote/I have Yoted.
there is also the past participle used in the sense of:
/get Yeeted on/ Get yoted on.
Which is similar to "get dunked on"
"Im gonna Yeet this real good"
*Yeets*
YEET! (as exclamation)
Wow you really yote that! When I saw you Yeeting i didnt think you would yeet so hard but it sure was a fine Yote!
Indeed, I have Yoted.
*Yeets*
YEET! (as exclamation)
Wow you really yote that! When I saw you Yeeting i didnt think you would yeet so hard but it sure was a fine Yote!
Indeed, I have Yoted.
by Oreoketchupchips October 13, 2023
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