What does this greeting mean? --> "You got me go"

Epsil0n00

Golden Member
Aug 29, 2001
1,187
0
76
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n
 

sswingle

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2000
7,183
45
91
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n

"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking
 

mordantmonkey

Diamond Member
Dec 23, 2004
3,075
5
0
I Think it's more like "you got me, go"
like, you have my attention, proceed. seems pretty dumb, but then so do a lot of colloquialisms.
 

middlehead

Diamond Member
Jul 11, 2004
4,573
2
81
Originally posted by: ScottSwingleComputers
"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking
Indeed. Think of it either as a comma or two sentences: "You got me, go." or "You got me. Go."
 

2Dead

Senior member
Feb 19, 2005
886
1
81
Originally posted by: ScottSwingleComputers
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n

"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking

This is what I was thinking.
 

eits

Lifer
Jun 4, 2005
25,015
3
81
www.integratedssr.com
Originally posted by: ScottSwingleComputers
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n

"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking

yup. i didn't see what was so hard about deciphering that.
 

Al Neri

Diamond Member
Jan 12, 2002
5,680
1
81
Originally posted by: ScottSwingleComputers
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n

"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking

 

pontifex

Lifer
Dec 5, 2000
43,804
46
91
Originally posted by: eits
Originally posted by: ScottSwingleComputers
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n

"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking

yup. i didn't see what was so hard about deciphering that.

this is ATOT. have you seen half the stuff posted here?
 

Epsil0n00

Golden Member
Aug 29, 2001
1,187
0
76
Originally posted by: eits
Originally posted by: ScottSwingleComputers
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n

"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking

yup. i didn't see what was so hard about deciphering that.

How 'bout you decipher my foot in your a$$.

Thanks to the others that posted helpful answers.
Eps.
 

randay

Lifer
May 30, 2006
11,018
216
106
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
Originally posted by: eits
Originally posted by: ScottSwingleComputers
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n

"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking

yup. i didn't see what was so hard about deciphering that.

How 'bout you decipher my foot in your a$$.

Thanks to the others that posted helpful answers.
Eps.

"How 'bout you" = STFU
"decipher my foot in your a$$." = n00b!
 

SoulAssassin

Diamond Member
Feb 1, 2001
6,135
2
0
I live in DE and never heard anyone say this but as everyone said it's probably "You got me....go." I don't think it's a local thing.
 

MaxDepth

Diamond Member
Jun 12, 2001
8,757
43
91
"You got me, go" = "Look, you little bastard, I am wasting my very important time to talk to you so this better be frikken important and so it is your turn to start flapping your lips and you better make sense."

:D
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,843
7,362
136
Originally posted by: MaxDepth
"You got me, go" = "Look, you little bastard, I am wasting my very important time to talk to you so this better be frikken important and so it is your turn to start flapping your lips and you better make sense."

:D

Yeah, that's generally the tone I've heard it said in before :laugh: People usually say it when they're annoying with someone, like a timewaster, and is their way of telling them "okay, you have a moment of my time, hurry up and say whatever it is you want to say."
 

eits

Lifer
Jun 4, 2005
25,015
3
81
www.integratedssr.com
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
Originally posted by: eits
Originally posted by: ScottSwingleComputers
Originally posted by: Epsil0n00
So, I was on a business trip recently in Delaware and I heard a really odd phrase that I had not heard before. Everytime the receptionist answered a phone call from her son (who owns the business) she greeted him by saying "You got me go" and then they proceeded with their conversation. She didn't answer this way when anyone called, just when her son called.

Does anyone know what this phrase/greeting means? I have never heard it in the western states...

Epsil0n

"You got me" = I answered, im listeneng, what do you want
"Go" = speak. what did you call me for, start talking

yup. i didn't see what was so hard about deciphering that.

How 'bout you decipher my foot in your a$$.

Thanks to the others that posted helpful answers.
Eps.

"How 'bout you decipher" = "i'm too dumb"
"my foot in your a$$" = "to figure really easy things out on my own"
"Thanks to the others that posted helpful answers" = "so, i'll yell at eits because he didn't understand why i couldn't figure out something so simple on my own"