Pretty nice and addiatude sass
by Makayla morales August 4, 2019
Get the eyonna mug.by Briggzy30 November 2, 2020
Get the eyop mug.Kindest person you’ll meet. Has a great smile and a great laugh. Always knows what’s up and will check in on you. Super talkative and will never make you feel awkward. He loves Christmas like a little kid so don’t ruin it for him. Warning: Might occasionally go bald and he falls asleep at random times.
by Not Marlin but Dory November 24, 2021
Get the Eyosias mug.Male genital organ. Slang originated from a long line of strange mutations, beginning with the word "everybody". It's a n internet thing.
by Robert Newson August 4, 2007
Get the eyone mug.The most annoying person you will ever meet. He is obnoxious and a jerk but he is the sexyest person you will ever meet.
by Zeeva Cruz January 16, 2009
Get the Eyon mug.A small island, especially in the Thames.
You say it like the number eight. Anyone living along the River Thames upstream of London as far as about Windsor or Reading will know this word, as it’s commonly used in the names of the little islands that dot the river in those reaches. But for most British people it surfaces only as a curious term during commentaries on the Oxford-Cambridge boat race, when places like Chiswick Eyot are regularly mentioned. It’s from Old English iggath (or igeth), which is based on ieg, an island, plus a diminutive suffix. So—a small island. As you might expect from its Old English credentials, it turns up in a couple of places in J R R Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings: “That night they camped on a small eyot close to the western bank”. An older form that’s more obviously connected to the way you say it is ait, a spelling retained in the names of some of the Thames islands and which Charles Dickens used in Bleak House: “Fog everywhere. Fog up the river, where it flows among green aits and meadows; fog down the river, where it rolls deified among the tiers of shipping and the waterside pollutions of a great (and dirty) city”.
You say it like the number eight. Anyone living along the River Thames upstream of London as far as about Windsor or Reading will know this word, as it’s commonly used in the names of the little islands that dot the river in those reaches. But for most British people it surfaces only as a curious term during commentaries on the Oxford-Cambridge boat race, when places like Chiswick Eyot are regularly mentioned. It’s from Old English iggath (or igeth), which is based on ieg, an island, plus a diminutive suffix. So—a small island. As you might expect from its Old English credentials, it turns up in a couple of places in J R R Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings: “That night they camped on a small eyot close to the western bank”. An older form that’s more obviously connected to the way you say it is ait, a spelling retained in the names of some of the Thames islands and which Charles Dickens used in Bleak House: “Fog everywhere. Fog up the river, where it flows among green aits and meadows; fog down the river, where it rolls deified among the tiers of shipping and the waterside pollutions of a great (and dirty) city”.
by rentastrawberry October 26, 2004
Get the Eyot mug.you're such a scamming jerk, a report happy. Go and do 'eyod!' if you want some, go and eat my dust too!
by heisPYO January 9, 2011
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