• corroded@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I honestly don’t remember ever having this kind of slang when I was a kid. If anything, our slang was borrowed from previous generations. (“Dude, that’s cool.”) I’m an old millennial, and I speak the same as Gen X and Boomers, it feels like. I never remember my parents asking “what the hell are you saying?”

    Am I just forgetting? Is there a late-90s, early-00s equivalent that I’ve just purged from memory?

    • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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      6 days ago

      Probably because you grew up with it an understand it. Here’s some 1950s brainrot slang:

      I’m a circled guy to an ex paper shaker when this bird dog tried to bash her ears at this fat city place, not supermurgitroid!

    • marzhall@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Literally any discussion about Pokeyman (or Yugioh, etc.) our parents overheard was complete nonsense noises to them. I’ve had this brought to my attention by my mother, but only as an adult.

      Also, anything we picked up from our era of flash videos - e.g., someone saying “so, this is the <x>…What a sweet <x> you might say” and someone else reflexively responding “round”, or a loop of “badger” and “mushroom” between friends: also nonsense.

      In any case, it’s an important skill to learn the new slang: as an old, it gives you the power to make it “cringe” by using it. Very fun, on god

      • WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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        6 days ago

        My grandma would always say “pokemans” and it took me a while to realize she was doing it intentionally to annoy us

      • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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        6 days ago

        it gives you the power to make it “cringe” by using it.

        With great power, comes great responsibility. Said responsibility is to ensure that the kids stop using that nonsense by always seeing old people using it “wrong” 🤭

    • 9point6@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      I think due to the internet being less of a thing, slang was a lot more localised.

      We definitely got a bit of influence from London slang (I grew up outside London) that never made it up to my cousins in Lancashire, however they had a load of different slang I hadn’t heard of.

    • Kühlschrank@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Yeah I’m on the same page as you - I remember we had some little differences here and there but it was nothing like it is today.

      They’re super proud of it too - the zoomers around me like to talk about it and explain their slang and I have to bit my tongue because I feel like if I was honest and told them 99% of their slang is dumb as shit I would just sound like the old ‘get off my lawn’ type.

      Though that would still be preferable to a dad in my orbit who has gone all in on the slang of his alpha kids and just sounds like the ‘hello fellow youth’ type.

    • anonymous111@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      I saw a post about slang being linked to platforms shadow blocking and de-monetizing posts with key words i.e. dead, suicide etc. Which lead to “not alive” slang, or something similar.

      I’m too old for this.

    • Drewmeister@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Nah, you’re not wrong. Sure, there was some more obscure stuff, but I’d say most could be figured out by context or from a traceable evolution from previous generations’ slang. The difference now is video-based social media has slang spreading and evolving at lightspeed. It’s impossible to keep up unless you’re immersed in that bubble either directly or by proxy of peers.

      • khornechips@sh.itjust.works
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        6 days ago

        For a recent example, watching how quickly “crashout” spread among the YouTube creators I normally watch was really incredible. I have no idea where it started but now it’s everywhere.

    • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      I never remember my parents asking “what the hell are you saying?”

      I was a teenager in the 1980s. My dad picked me up from a party one night and happened to see the video that was playing on MTV. During the ride home he went on and on about how disturbing the imagery and lyrics from the video were.

      It was “Cuts Like a Knife” by Bryan Adams. Imagine thinking fucking Bryan Adams is triggering the apocalypse lol. He’s Canadian for pete’s sake!