by DFVZAHg r\g February 4, 2021

Uganda: Do you know da wae?????
Random person: Yeah, the princess of da wae is over there.
Uganda: Brodas! We have found... DA WAE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
All the Uganda Knuckles: *klick klick klick klick klick klick klick klick klick*
Random person: Yeah, the princess of da wae is over there.
Uganda: Brodas! We have found... DA WAE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
All the Uganda Knuckles: *klick klick klick klick klick klick klick klick klick*
by dope derp February 14, 2018

by MIKEY121212 August 14, 2011

by Gayboy69420666 January 15, 2018

a communication tactic commonly used among close friends to clarifly that they are on the same wave length.
One friend to another: "I would go but I don't feel like being the third wheel, you know what I mean."
by Anonymous October 3, 2003

Often accompanied by someone playing a few seconds of the song titled "Sicko Mode" by Travis Scott, they are the cursed words every single McDonald’s employee had to listen to day in and day out every single day between September 8th and October 4th 2020 when excited customers came to order the meal at their local McDonald’s, some even visiting several as they reportedly had shortages on common items found in the meal due to the popularity of the promotion. If you’d like to see some of this madness for yourself, search up "you know why I’m here" on YouTube. (Without the quotation marks.)
McDonald’s employee: Hi, welcome to McDonald’s can I take your order?
Customer: You know why I’m here. (plays Sicko Mode)
Employee: *sighs internally* You want some Sprite with that?
Customer: Yeah.
Customer: You know why I’m here. (plays Sicko Mode)
Employee: *sighs internally* You want some Sprite with that?
Customer: Yeah.
by Mikkebak August 9, 2021

Phrase used by the inarticulate and dimwitted as a comma and to buy time and cover their lack of knowledge of a subject on which they have decided to speak and the resulting insecurity this engenders.
It is particularly irritating in sportspeople, presenters and commentators as they are paid way in excess of the average salary of their audience precisley to tell them what it is they mean. The unspoken assumption is that the audience are already well aware of the 'gem of wisdom' or 'fact' (or see cliche) imparted by the 'expert' and that there really is no need to pay him or her £5000 an episode to provide such insightless insights.
It is particularly irritating in sportspeople, presenters and commentators as they are paid way in excess of the average salary of their audience precisley to tell them what it is they mean. The unspoken assumption is that the audience are already well aware of the 'gem of wisdom' or 'fact' (or see cliche) imparted by the 'expert' and that there really is no need to pay him or her £5000 an episode to provide such insightless insights.
by Dazzla October 3, 2003
