MSN: New Brainrot Incoming: Here's What "Brr Brr Patapim" Means and Why It Matters on Social Media
New Brainrot Incoming: Here's What "Brr Brr Patapim" Means and Why It Matters on Social Media
"Brr" is often used to indicate the sound of a machine working. Like we'll describe a car engine as "going brr". So "something goes brrr" means "something makes a working-machine noise". ("Brr" is also used to describe the sound people make when they are very cold and shivering, but that doesn't fit in this context.)
What does ' (something) goes brrr' mean and how to use it?
Your grandmother is shivering. The word you are using is called an onomatopoeia, which is a word that is spelled in such a way as to make the sound. Different cultures around the world make sounds differently. See, for example, this Wikipedia page. Often, Americans will spell the sound "brr." In Russia, I saw it spelled "zhzh" (actually it was in Cyrillic, but this is the English equivalent).