For The Holidays, Pronounced "For The Holiday." Derived from FTW (For The Win) and FTL (For The Lose).
by TK-427 December 23, 2005
"finding that humerous"
the word is used in context simliair to words such as "lol" or "rofly" - but is intended to be more precise.
It acknowledges that a statement is humerous, but does not imply that you are doing something you might not be doing (such as laughing).
the word is used in context simliair to words such as "lol" or "rofly" - but is intended to be more precise.
It acknowledges that a statement is humerous, but does not imply that you are doing something you might not be doing (such as laughing).
by Pat January 10, 2004
by kaliuchismybae November 25, 2022
Let's say you work on a team that uses Slack to communicate. Instead of tiresomely typing all of the characters: "Free to huddle", you simply type fth?
by dtreent February 23, 2024
by RayanDontgiveAf November 02, 2022