On October 11, 2017, Caroline Fenkel, "The Power of the IRL Community: Providing Space for Youths Missing and Participating", US News and World Report:
Normally my teenager will shout "Yeet". I do not yet know what it means, but I know that they want to say this, and usually like positive things.
To my surprise, yeet broadly means "yes". However, it may also be a kind of greeting, or just an enthusiastic squeal, like a little story.
It might look like a whole body, but Yeet is a new problem, but before you start your own yeet adventure, you need to know some very important skills. Here are 7 different ways
June 1, 2015, David Turner, "Interview: YouTube star SheLoves Meechie jumps from the garage to the stage",
Meechie's video reaches hundreds of thousands, and sometimes even beyond the official visual effects of the artist, but his recent success has been to a certain dance like the whip, Yet, and the region's "Hit Dem Folks" It is in focus. Dance, imitate a dunk of a basketball player
For black teenagers in particular, they used disproportionately popular vines and used social networks to show wisdom, wisdom, creativity and comic time. It includes a dance trend like yeet
Yeet (there is a simple form of the third person singular, now a greeting of participle, a greeting of simple past and past participle, or (humor) yaut)
Yeet (the simple existence form of the third person singular form is yeet, now is a greetings of participle, simple past and greetings of past participle)
Octopus is the most common form, but octopus can be used as an alternative in the Merriam-Webster dictionary, and octopus, octopus and octopus are listed in descending order of frequency of use in Oxford English Dictionary (Simpson and Weiner 1989). The term amphibian (sometimes multiple amphibian and amphibian can be found) comes from a classified octopus, but there is no classical equivalent. Fowler's Modern English Usage (Fowler 2003) states that "the only plural that is permitted in English is octopus", octopus is wrong, and that chapter is pedant. Noun, it is not. Instead, in Greek, oktṓpous (ὀκτώπους), male sex, plural is okt okpodes (ὀκτώποδες). If Latin is the mother tongue, it will be Octopus ("8 ft.") And multiple Octoped.
The universal, common, and modern spelling of this term is a phenomenon. In the above alternatives, Phenomenon, Phenomenon, and Pionomon are etymologically identical, keeping the basic meaning of that ancient Greek; the first two cases are Latin binaries. In the Roman form of sound, and in the latter it is direct transfer of the original ancient Greek. There is no etymological basis in the form of spelling. All of these alternatives are identical and old, except for the phainomenon pronounced in the first stage, with some technical uses seen in academia.