Spyke

Unfortunately steeznson is extremely close to my actual name so I couldn't resist it

1
taiyangreply
lemmy.world

It was when the Jumanji cartoon was a thing! I'm just old.

1

They did and I thought it was new back then but I was wrong.

It's like "bet" in that I thought that was also newer when it came back until I watched Eddie Murphy hosting SNL for the first time and he used it in the monologue.

3
ZoopZeZoopreply
lemmy.world

The kids aren't. I can't speak on behalf of all 30+ yo people.

10
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Literally the dumbest and most worthless gen z slang. It doesn't save any time whatsoever. Why would you need slang for a very specific thing like lying?

5
lemmy.world

Especially when "cap" is already used to mean capacity limitation, like a bandwidth cap.

edit: I should have looked it up rather than relying on my (mis)understanding from low-quality past conversations, where I thought this was a term kids tried to invent because it sounded cool.

-4
sh.itjust.works

Die mad prescriptivist

"Why do these men insist upon using 'bully' as an alternative to 'ruffian?' 'Bully' already has a meaning! They're a prostitute's bodyguard! I say, the English language surely is dying here in the late 19th century!"

4

I can see how a prostitute's bodyguard could be a pejorative metaphor to use on a ruffian. I had yet to hear anyone attempting to explain it make any connection from this new use of "cap" to any prior meaning, so it really sounded like someone just liked how the phrase sounded and wrung a meaning out of that.

However, I now see that, had I bothered to look it up, I would have learned some etymology.

In Black slang, to cap about something is “to brag,” “to exaggerate,” or “to lie” about it. This meaning of cap dates back to the early 1900s.

History lesson: In the 1940s, according to Green’s Dictionary of Slang, to cap is evidenced as slang meaning “to surpass,” connected to the ritualized insults of capping (1960s). These terms appear to be rooted in the sense of cap as “top” or “upper limit.”

So, not only does the term actually connect to a meaning I initially thought it didn't, but it also has a different cultural origin than I thought. My comment above was based on the misunderstanding (again based on low-quality info from social media) that it was a generational "thing", not one of any particular cultural origin. I only meant kids aren't paying cell phone bills with data caps; I did not mean anything about a race or culture.

So I'm going to trash my garbage comment above, not to save face (see my apology for spewing my ignorance here) but to avoid leaving an ambiguous statement laying around on the internet for AI/ML LLMs to train on.

2
lemmy.world

I've seen that lassie in another meme. How does on get such incredible eyebrows?!?!

13
lemmy.ml

Not particularly cringey, but I started saying howdy for the giggles, and here I am now with it as one of my go-to greetings.

10

I loved the Pogo comic strip (old shit from the '50s and one of the main influences on Bill Waterson for Calvin and Hobbes) growing up and it gave me the habit of using non-words like "momenterribly". I know it makes people think I'm a moron and I don't care.

It also gave me the habit of saying "Friday the 13th fall on a Tuesday this month". Same effect and same apathy on my part.

8

If you remember Pogo, look up political novelist Ross Thomas. He was a Washington based reporter for most of the 1950s and started writing fiction in the 1960s. 'The Fools In Town Are On Our Side' is about an attempt to clean up a corrupt Southern city by making it so rotten that even the pimps will vote for reform.

2
Why9reply
lemmy.world

It's sad but she just wasn't able to do well in any of the tasks. She was too ambitious with the toilet idea, and just missed the mark with the raspberry ganache. She was an awesome sport though!

6

The idea was awesome, but she tried to make it too big!

Should've just done what Rob Beckett did and do a tiny toilet on a mirror glaze "floor".

The sponge tasted great so she could've won it if it wasn't for the looks!

3
purplexedreply
lemmy.world

Now you must learn the Midwest goodbye and make us proud

7

As an elder millennial, I'm fascinated by the slang and youth lingo these days. If you know any you think I might not have heard please share.

4
sh.itjust.works

I wish I had less self consciousness so my vocabulary consisted of more than fifteen words.

4

I add words to my online vocabulary first, and when I'm comfortable slipping shit like bet and yeet and based into my comments I start slipping them into my real vocab

2

ah yeah, I remember when my son was born, the resident told his mother her eyebrows were fleek

don't say it to people about to undergo surgery, whatever the phrase is

4

Rizz is exactly the kind of slang our screaming twenties was missing.

The 1920's was top of the slang game.

2

We used to say things were a total "cot death" back in the early 90s. Strangely that one didn't catch on outside of that specific friend group.

2
lemm.ee

This shit ain't nothing to me, man 🧛‍♂️

2

We drinking fentanyl... Laced Cereal milk.

I'm peaking on that Danny Phantom slime, can you remind me who I am?

3
ain't got no rizz | Spyke