Internet slang standing for "Ask Us Anything" — a variant of the more widespread "AMA" (Ask Me Anything) format popularized on Reddit, adapted for use by groups, organizations, or multiple hosts rather than a single individual. Typically used as the title or hashtag for an open Q&A session on social media platforms, forums, or live streams. The shift from "me" to "us" signals that the session involves more than one respondent, such as a brand, a team, or a panel.
The dev team posted an AUA thread to field questions about the upcoming game update.
Add your own interpretation of "AUA".
Viral internet speak — memes, ratios, main-character moments, and the algospeak of every platform from Twitter to Reddit to TikTok comment sections.
See all Internet & Memes slang on Slangora.
Browse all slang words starting with A.
No comments yet — say something.
An internet abbreviation standing for ask us anything, functioning like the well-known AMA (ask me anything) but addressed to a group or organization rather than an individual. Used on forums, social media, and community platforms when a team, brand, or group invites public questions. Less common than AMA but follows the same format and community-engagement intent. The format typically involves the group posting an announcement inviting questions, then responding to them publicly over a set period, mirroring the AMA structure.
The dev team ran an AUA on Reddit to address questions about the upcoming patch.
No comments yet — say something.
(slang, internet) ask us anything.
No comments yet — say something.