prolly not
derived from the saying "probably not", it can also mean I don't think so or more than likely not
You look good tonight shortie; prolly not!
prolly not
another word for the word probably not, a shorter version usually used in slang cities like Berdoo. Another creative used by monica.
1.hey dawg are you gonna get at that.
2.Prolly not, c'mon butterface!!!
2.Prolly not, c'mon butterface!!!
Prolly
A shortened way of saying probably.
Friend 1: Hey Isaiah, you want to shoot some hoops?
Friend 2: Prolly
Friend 2: Prolly
Prolly
This is a colloquial version of the word "probably", in common usage in the upper Midwest, especially those areas of Wisconsin whose populations were drawn from German-speaking immigrants like Milwaukee and Madison. Definitely predates Internet.
I'm prolly gonna get some cheese fries with that.
Prolly
Shortened version of "probably". Typically used in online conversations, although REALLY lazy people have started using it in verbal conversations as well...
I'm feeling lazy so I prolly won't bother doing homework.
prolly
A spoken colloquialism that existed pre-internet, despite what many people claim.
"Prolly" is a clipped pronunciation of "probably"; compare with "g'day" as a clipped pronunciation of "good day", or "gonna" as a common spoken shortening of "going to".
Certainly non-standard, but not necessarily indicative of the writer's laziness. For some, writing in this manner mimics their natural speech pattern/dialect.
"Prolly" is a clipped pronunciation of "probably"; compare with "g'day" as a clipped pronunciation of "good day", or "gonna" as a common spoken shortening of "going to".
Certainly non-standard, but not necessarily indicative of the writer's laziness. For some, writing in this manner mimics their natural speech pattern/dialect.
She said she'd prolly come over after she's finished relaxin' at the beach.
(spoken example) "I'm prolly gonna head down to Toranna {Toronto} for the May 2-4."
(spoken example) "I'm prolly gonna head down to Toranna {Toronto} for the May 2-4."
prolly
Literary colloquialism for "probably", most likely first used in print in John Kennedy Toole's Confederacy of Dunces, (1980), in the speech of one of the book's characters, the mother of the protagonist, Ignatius J. Reilly. The use of the word is meant to reflect the speech typical of white working-class residents of New Orleans, Louisiana.
That prolly is the reason he left in the first place.