it means i love you. the < 3 is suppossed to be a heart...its like sayin i love you.
boy:ok babe, i've gotta go
girl:ok hun, i <3 u
boy;...what does that mean?...
girl: it means i love you...duh!1
boy:...ohhhh ok...i get it now.
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this phase is used to enourage others to fb, rt, or like somebody's post because sometimes people be acting like they famous and dont wanna interact witchu because they dont wanna come off as thirsty. this person is being compared to beyonce because she is known to follow zero people on instagram and barely interacts with people on twitter, MUCH less instagram
"why you following zero people on instagram stop tryna be beyonce"
"follow me back u aint beyonce"
a man that wears gucci and drinks wazko, they wil usually follow spag it gud64 on insta
dat boi be gucci af my nigga
*comes to de nigga
u gucci boi, do u kno de wae
'no'
fuck off
No u times infinity reflects anything to its caster , its quite op and its best used to reflect a no u or a 1 hit KO insult.
John : Hi i like fortnite
Tom : I play minecraft
John : lol y u dumb
Tom : no u
John : lol ur mom gay kid
Tom : no u
John : no no u
*omae wo mo shindieru*
Tom : NO U TIMES INFINITY
used to ask someone if they understand, to see if the comprehend, something usually asked when someone wants someone to empathize, also used to see if the agree with you
Lisa: Girl it is just so hard deeling with him i just wanna ugh! i dnt kno.. i still think he cheatin on me.
Asia: I doubt dat maybe he's jus busy
Lisa: Busy?.. Busy doin wat no one is dat busy all he has to do is call... U feel me
Asia: True
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A phrase asking if someone has a problem with you, what you're doing or what you like, usually said as a threat.
Some guy: "System of a down sucks!"
Some guy who likes system of a down: "u got beef?"
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(ECONOMICS) Total unemployed, as a percent of the civilian labor force (official unemployment rate). Does not include discouraged workers. Also referred to as "headline unemployment" because it is the statistic reported in the news.
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics regularly publishes six estimates of unemployment. The others are U-1, U-3, U-4, U-5, and U-6. Eurostat publishes one monthly estimate of unemployment for the European Union, which is approximately midway between U-3 and U-4.
The unemployment statistics for the USA are collected through a monthly Current Population Survey (CPS) (also known as the household survey) and an establishment survey.
U-3 is the official unemployment rate in the USA; it excludes passive jobseekers (people who are just looking for available job openings without applying). Passive jobseekers are counted as part of the labor force in Europe, but not in the USA. Prior to the 2008 economic crisis, this caused unemployment rates in the USA to be about 1% lower than they would have been if the BLS had used European methods of estimating.
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