Spyke
lemmy.world

Even old people will just stop using them, like “groovy”.

71
WALLACEreply
feddit.uk

Yeah. Thankfully nobody says things like "epic fail" anymore

10

What makes skibidi not a real word? Sure, it's a nonsense word often used to replace other words, but it still carries some meaning, even if vague

Remember that linguistics isn't just about high brow standard written/spoken language, it covers all types of language, including slang, body language and sign language

There are real linguists with real qualifications who have actually studied gen Z and gen alpha slang and gotten scientific conclusions out of it

I believe one linguist who studied it was able to either impress or embarrass a high school by speaking entirely in correct gen Z/gen alpha slang

1

Yeah I feel like not hearing people use "groovy" is more because things aren't feeling very groovy lately.

3
lemmy.world

Yo dawg, that would be like totally tubular unless the geezers spaz out like lamo rents gettin all agro after gettin to tha crib and finding all da homies having a jammy jam in the hizzie. Ya feel me, cuz?

33
Laristalreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Misspelled "lame-o" is my guess. Though my spelling of it is a guess as well.

9
Dasusreply
lemmy.world

Misspelled? Letters used to cost money, you know. 160 chars/msg.bst to shrten evrything

3

Nice reference.

Btw Ali G came up nice. As in Sacha wasn't left to be defined by Ali, went on to become Borat (which was also like the 20 years ago), has done some seriously good drama shows and now is looking like this:

2
lemmy.world

C'mon Gen Z. You can't have "tubular". That's clearly an 80s term, and thus belongs to the millenials. Same thing with "crib" and the 90s.

"Cuz" was early 2000s. I don't know who that one falls to. All I know is I was about 18 before I heard it. So, basically on my last legs as far as being able to claim slang to my generation.

Geezers isn't even my generation, or Gen X. It's either the Boomers, The Greatest Generation, or The Silent Generation. Really pulling slang out by the roots on that one. What's next? Are we going to take a trip to the Piggly Wiggly?

3

"Cuz" was early 2000s

Reminds me of reading Macbeth in high school:

My dearest cuz,/ I pray you school yourself – MACBETH, IV ii

The Yellow Stocking Tales blog has a neat list of words used by Shakespeare and how the meanings have changed over time (or haven’t changed, in the case for the word “cuz”)

2
lemmy.world

Greatest generation is dead dude. Ok maybe a few are around but like, they're 100+

0

.......ok? Does them being dead today negate the slang they created when they were alive?

Or are you claiming old slang gets put in the free for all bin, for any generation can adopt as their own?

Because I wouldn't mind picking up "bees knees" when that becomes available.

2
kieron115reply
startrek.website

One of these days I need to go and read through the Calvin and Hobbes collection I bought for my bookshelf when it was on a steep discount. I remember reading them all the time as a kid.

9
toynbeereply
lemmy.world

A relatable situation; when my kid can read a little better I mean to very enthusiastically introduce them to it.

Though honestly they might enjoy the beautiful artwork without bothering to read. Or it might encourage them to practice. Hmm.

4

Either way is good IMO. Even if they just look at the pictures and imagine their own stories I have to believe that's good for a developing mind.

3

"cooking" in the context of doing something well has been around for a long time. Think, "now you're cooking!" Or the less common "now you're cooking with gas!"

I think it's just in more frequent use currently. It will be interesting to see if people stop using it after it goes out of fashion with the youth.

26
aussie.zone

Does that come from getting paid and therefore being able to feed oneself

1

Yeah sort of like, "They are performing at a high level and carrying the team, let them get stats (==better contract)"

1

Yup

Phrase what's cooking? "what's up, what's going on" is attested by 1942. To cook with gas "do well, act or think correctly" is 1930s jive talk.

The expression "NOW YOU'RE COOKING WITH GAS" has bobbed up again — this time as a front page streamer on the Roper Ranger, and as the banner line in the current advertising series of the Nashville (Tenn.) Gas and Heating Company, cleverly tying gas cooking to local food products and restaurants. "Now you're cooking with gas" literally took the gas industry by the ears around December 1939 — Remember? — when it flashed forth in brilliant repartee from the radio programs of the Maxwell Coffee Hour, Jack Benny, Chase and Sanborn, Johnson Wax, Bob Hope and sundry others. [American Gas Association Monthly, vol. xxiii, 1941

10
lemmy.world

As an old person today, I have no clue what these words mean. Assuming cooking has nothing to do with food. I've never heard rizz. I've at least heard people use based, though I don't know its use.

12

Rizz = Charisma

Based = Cool; Awesome; Good.

Cooked = Fucked (as in up, not sexually).

Cooking = Doing something (usually good, but does not necessarily have to be).

Sincerely,

A 40 year old Millennial.

24
hypnicjerkreply
lemmy.world

'cooking' specifically implies either creativity or efficacy (or both, some novel solution that results in success)

17

Ah but then there is the phrase "let him cook," which tends to be used when someone starts doing something that seems foolish. I would think it at least somewhat relates to "cooking." If you fail, you are "cooked."

Edit: To clarify, this phrase is commonly seen after someone says something like "hey, don't do that;" I did not mean to imply the phrase itself has an inherent good/bad connotation, merely what has been pointed out that they want to "wait and see" the results before making judgement.

12
foggyreply
lemmy.world

This version of cook seems aligned with "hold on."

As in "it's not yet apparent that what's happening makes sense/is good."

Where's that tiktok linguist kid when ya need him.

12

Cooking - you are doing something good

Cooked, getting cooked - someone is messing around with you and you fall for it, kinda like this maybe could be better explanation.

"You are cooking" - you made a song, for example, and it was great song.

"You are cooked" - kinda like when you, as a child, do something bad and your parents are going to be mad when they find out — you are basically cooked.

9

I'd say "let him cook" is foolishness-agnostic. It could be good or bad, but it's definitely unexpected

8

I thought it was recognizing that the person acted/spoke their conscience, more or less

1

I consider 'based' an opposite of 'sour' or 'acidic'. That is, being alkaline and having high pH is considered socially desirable. Mixing based and sour personalities will naturally produce salt, that is, dried tears.

Cooking is a term for any time-consuming chemical reaction, which happens to include food preparation.

I have no chemistry-related explanation for rizz. Something to do with sparks?

6
lemmy.world

My 34 year-old brother says "rats!" when something bad happens. He learned from our grandpa.

11

I make it a point to adopt some of my grandpa's lingo. Funnily enough my 18-20 year old students can smell 30yo slang from a mile away and will point out it ages me, but they've never said anything about the random 50s teenage slang I incorporate.

3

Oooh, I like that, I'm terrified of rats, so that would be a great replacement, for the usual word, when around kids, too.

1

in the nursing home talking about how I rizzed up the nurses (i didn't)

10
sh.itjust.works

Lil B in quotes like he's a massively obscure figure from the past. The years really don't stop coming.

1
dil
lemmy.zip

they already are in black communities, teens see tiktok comments and go wow new slang, a lot of this shit isnt new tho, like bop wasnt new but everyone acted like it was a new tiktok word, neither was thot on twitter or many others, rizz isnt new, its been around, cooking and based? not new at all

10
Raireply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Absolutely! I’m old, but somehow I am still semi-“hip”

1

I'm old, but I was homeschooled so not once was I hip.

In fact I'm pretty sure my actual physical hip is failing.

2
dilreply

the song one is common, but it also used to mean a hoe and means that again, ppl on tiktok comments were acting like that was recent but I remember it being used in that context as a kid

1

Nothing is new under the sun.

I heard that once in a bible class and it's stuck with me ever since. And imo it beautifully encapsulates humanity's trends and fads.

Language is an ever-evolving thing, but at the same time, how many variations of something can be made before we've made all of them? Humanity has been around for thousands of years; I find it hard to believe that just about any word we could come up with is actually brand new and no other human has heard it before.

1
HereIAmreply
lemmy.world

How is rizz not new? I've never seen it until tiktok.

0
dilreply

Where do you think tiktok slang comes from? It's just popular slang someone uses in a comment that middleschool kids who are from different areas, that have never heard it before parrot, because they literally just copy popular comments bar for bar hoping to get likes

3
dilreply
lemmy.zip

I've heard it plenty, california

2
ozymandiasreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

rizz comes from African Americans Vernacular English and has been around for decades…. white kids on tiktok recently learned it…

4
lemmy.world

I've been around for decades too, even living in California, and the first time I've heard the word is recently with the new generation of tiktok people.

0

well slang is very regional, as well as specific to different subcultures… like gamers have tons of slang/jargon…
seems like kids like to appropriate slang from elsewhere (often black slang, probably from music), then they assume they invented it and gatekeep it, then it progresses to boring or becomes part of the language like “cool”….
but whatever, i’m down with it… it’s totally tubular!

2
dilreply

How the fuck would I remember a specific year

0

They are already getting there. Hearing forty year olds say it means kids are now stopping saying it.

9
Patchesreply
ttrpg.network

I would imagine because you spend way more time watching millennial YouTubers than you do hanging out with high school ers

4

Yeah! Screw me for not wanting to hang around the little shits after having to deal with them at work right?

2

I was today years old when I relaised that "gag" in that phrase presumably means "make me vomit" not "silence me". I've spent many decades being confused about that...

8
aussie.zone

They already are, as people on here know them. Also “cooking” just seems to be shorthand for “cooking with gas”, with the same connotations and meaning, and boomers are definitely saying that.

8
Zahille7reply
lemmy.world

I'm a partial to "cooking with grease" just cause it's different.

0

I like to say "cooking with magnets" because 1) it sounds cooler and 2) when people look at me weird I can immediately launch into my spiel about how induction heating is superior to gas in every way.

1

I haven't heard swag in a long while and so I'm not sure how many of these words will actually be used enough later on.

7
lemmy.ca

Nah, these expressions will just fall out of use. You think this is the first time people came up with funny fad expressions?

Sorry, but you ain't all dat and a bag of potato chips. Fo shizzle.

7

All dat has become allat now in meme speak so maybe not totally out of fashion

1
lemmy.world

Not really. Just look up the some slang words from 2000's you've never heard of but what everyone in my generation would've been constantly using.

Ofc some of them are still around, but most aren't.

6

I'll be ambling through nursing home hallways in a threadbare robe on the way to the ol' skibidi while some orderlies with multicolor levitating hair make modem noises at each other.

That'll just be the microplastic poisoning setting in though.

6
lemmy.zip

They already are.

Source: I’m old and I can use all those words correctly.

5

Yea but when old people now use it, it's an oddity. I think OP means when old men in general are talking about Razz and Skibity outhouse.

2
Zozanoreply
aussie.zone

And then you hit em with the "BASED ON DEEZ NUTS"

17

And the nursing homes will be full of Arya, Daenarys, and Khaleesi. Boys movie names tend to be pretty underwhelming. Maybe a bunch of “Wades” from Deadpool.

4
MrMcGasionreply
lemmy.world

Even as a 90s kid I only heard half of those from the Super Mario World Special Zone level titles (along with Mondo).

3

To be fair, we also heard them from the ninja turtles, and any other kids media and/or commercials trying to appeal to the demographic. Some of us used it sarcastically on the playground, but I don’t think any of us knew anyone who used it seriously. I think it might have been surfer slang that was co-opted by marketing departments?

2

By that time language may be unrecognizable by those of you still around

4

I heard this thing that humans are tribal creatures and in any group, family, friend etc, they will invariably develop their own language, and they didn't mention it but generationally specify slang is so much more beautiful when viewed through that lens. So even if it's an old person thing, for those of us privileged to be able to stay on this earth that long, it will still be your tribes language and you will feel at home saying it. And that's all that matters.

3