If you aren't aware of what AITA means on the internet, we're about to educate you with the help of a sixteen-year-old Dublin girl.
The teenager posted on the popular Reddit advice thread r/AmItheAsshole, seeking the internet's judgement on a dispute.
It's one of the most popular sites on Reddit, with millions of people browsing it daily.
But earlier this year, things took an Irish twist when the Dubliner entered the subreddit with a big problem.
She began: "My family and I recently moved from Dublin, Ireland, to a small town in the South of the United States, a real "Bible Belt" town where it seems they don't get a lot of "foreigners" like myself and my family.
"I recently joined the local high school as a Sophomore, or 10th grade.
"I don't like it here. My classmates keep making this big to-do about my ****ing accent, asking me stupid **** like "have you ever seen a lepurchan(sic)?" "do you all live in little stone cottages and wear buckle shoes", things like that, stereotypes of life in Ireland.
"It's all so annoying. I don't like it here and I miss Ireland, miss my family, my nan and my cousins and all my friends."
And things got worse for the user when schools returned recently in the States.

"One of my history classes this year has a focus on other cultures than just American, so we study different countries. My teacher didn't wait long to ask me to share about life "in the far away land of Ireland".
"Thing is, I don't want to be some ****ing show pony for these people. My culture, my country, is not some display to be touted out like this. We're real people, we have real lives, we're not stuck in the 1700s farming sheep and ****, we have cities and internet and health care, we're a fully evolved society. It isn't my job to teach her class.
"Of course, I'm now seen as some kind of anti-social bully because I told the teacher plainly that I would not agree to her request. Now the school wants to have a sit-down with my parents and me because they "have concerns" about my well-being.
"Am I really such an a**hole because I don't want to be used as some kind of performance monkey because I'm from a different country?"
The question divided the responders.
One sympathised, saying: "I hope you find your way here. But high school in the southern US truly is a nightmare."
While another suggested to "use the opportunity to educate and inspire. I think too few Americans travel which gives them an even lesser understanding of other cultures and how people live."
But many were not impressed.
One user said:"It comes across in your writing that you see the place you moved to as filled with ignorant uncultured untravelled hicks and Dublin as a far better than the place you are now.
"You may be different to them, but you are not better than them. If you allowed yourself the opportunity to get to know some of the people and the culture you have moved to you will probably find that there are things about America which are enjoyable and even better than back home."
While a second added:"It's extremely hypocritical to take issue with what the people at your school are doing while simultaneously going "Oh the US is just so awful compared to Ireland!" Drop the superiority complex and get over yourself."