It is one of the most common words to say. A teenager would use and abuse this stinking word so much to make themselves sound generic and stupid unintentionally.
"And I was L-ike this, and he was llike that, and I was like oh my gosh"
"This is, like, awful!"
1. To enjoy something.
2. Referring to facebook.
1. He likes cake.
2. "I liked her status last night!! They were my favorite lyrics."
11π 2π
Locale: UK, Birmingham/Northern England. Word added to sentences in these districts, to affirm something.
"So we went to the shops like"
28π 8π
someone or something that likes another someone or something.
adrian: βher over there.. yeah she likes youβ
jearl: βyeah i liked her but not anymoreβ
25π 8π
Perhaps the most random Facebook feature ever.
Kaitlyn is portage placing.
Joshua Sapoznik "likes this"
31π 10π
(1) like = said (the first Valley Girl,popularized in a 1982 Frank Zappa song,swapped "like" for "said")
(2) word used in conversation to set up quotations
(3) word used as a stall tactic when they're not confident about what they're saying, akin to "uh" or "um", a space-filler in conversation to keep the other person from injecting into an otherwise-quiet space between thoughts; sometimes thought to be a sign of a poor vocabulary
(1) I'm like, `Gag me with a spoon' and she's like, `Oh my God!'
(2) He's, like, `Go ahead.'
(3) I'm like, thinking about taking my clothes off, but I'm like, on my period, and I'm thinking, like, does he want to 'do it' when Im, like, going to be bleeding all over, like, his cock....
41π 15π
In the UK we call this a comma. Used mostly to introduce a qoute, it is also used randomly by irritating teenagers and people who dropped out of school or have never read a book above the literary standard of Guns 'n' Ammo. It can be exchanged with a number of other phrases, including I was all.
1. To introduce a quote: So I was like, "duuuude" and he was all "baaaabe".
2. Randomly: Like, oh my God, that is, like, so wrong.
370π 184π