Good to go:
"Say, I'm heading out. You coming?"
"gtg."
Got to go:
"Shoot, it's almost midnight. gtg."
"Say, I'm heading out. You coming?"
"gtg."
Got to go:
"Shoot, it's almost midnight. gtg."
by Mephianse September 08, 2004
by personthatsubmits stuff August 31, 2010
by wertyy102 October 25, 2016
Good to go.
Commonly confused with 'g2g' which means "got to go". They are different, and 'gtg' is normally used in online games to indicate a participant's "ready status." It is seeing common usage today as indicating in the example.
Commonly confused with 'g2g' which means "got to go". They are different, and 'gtg' is normally used in online games to indicate a participant's "ready status." It is seeing common usage today as indicating in the example.
by kohner March 19, 2009