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Parents and Gen Alpha kids are having unintelligible convos because of ‘brainrot’ language

Every generation has slang, but Gen Alpha’s has a particularly unhinged quality, some parents say. Still, experts say their bad rep isn’t totally deserved.

In the beginning, there was “skibidi.”

It appeared abruptly in the lexicons of kids under 14 — the first slang term unique to Generation Alpha. Parents’ ears perked up as they began to hear it around the dinner table. It could mean bad, cool, or nothing at all, their kids explained. Then a dozen more incomprehensible terms followed suit.

Gen Z’s “slay” and “tea” are officially vintage, giving way to “sigma,” “gyatt” and “fanum tax.”

Everyone’s getting whiplash.

Kolanaki ,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Fanum tax? Shit, I thought they were saying phantom tax.

Etterra ,

Slang is stupid, film at 11:00. This is just old people complaining about young people. We’ve been doing this for literally thousands of years. It’s not newsworthy, not even in in the modern age of 6 second attention spans.

hactar42 ,

This is basically repeated every 10 years. Some of them will stick around for the long-term some will die. I don’t for see skibidi or gyatt stick around long-term. At least not unironical. I’m in my 40s and I don’t have any peers who still use words like “phat” or “whateves”. But someone saying bling would not seem out of place.

P00ptart ,

Remember that year or two where everything cool was “da bomb”?

bradorsomething ,

Get hip with the new jive, daddy-o!

WeirdGoesPro ,
@WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I thought I was getting old, but I’m proud to say that I knew most of these terms. I still got it, baby!

Skibidi.

msage ,

Can’t wait for some local news with traditional reporting of teen slang:

“Is your teen child using slang like ‘no cap’? It could indicade that they are having Sex-Without-Protection. More at 11.”

Paddzr ,

Does “tea” mean dinner?

ChairmanMeow ,
@ChairmanMeow@programming.dev avatar

It means “gossip about drama”. “Spilling” the “tea” is talking about said gossip.

PugJesus ,
shalafi ,

The difference is the rate at which new slang is born.

PugJesus ,

The primary difference is that the slang ends up born (and abandoned) on the national and international levels, whereas in times past slang would become lodged in the regional vernacular first, and some of it would never move ‘up’ to replace old slang. In a sense, then, there was more slang in days past - it just was less ‘standardized’.

shalafi ,

I kinda get that. We called anime “Japanimation” in the 80s. Nothing racist there for y’all haters, just what we called it. But you’re right, never heard that term outside my local group.

Phegan ,

Dividing us into generations is a way to make us feel segmented and separated. The concept of generations is made up, we shouldn’t feel tribal about the era we were born in.

Phegan ,

Every generation has this article published about them, congratulations, you are officially old and out of touch.

deuleb_biezelbob ,
@deuleb_biezelbob@programming.dev avatar
dohpaz42 ,
@dohpaz42@lemmy.world avatar

Quit taxing their gig so hard-core cruster.

wjrii ,

I’ve been watching Language Jones lately, and I think he’s got a good and academically well-informed take on this topic.

themadcodger ,
@themadcodger@kbin.earth avatar

Thank you for that. I have a new subscription to binge.

Wirlocke ,

As a Gen-Z, I feel this divide is the result of our gen growing up on the internet and Gen-Alpha growing up in the internet. Like culturally I feel Gen-Z still had roots to reality hidden behind layers of absurdism and abstraction. Gen-Alpha however feels like it’s generating new cultural landmarks with no connections to reality.

Like, skibidi was absurdist humor, which is now being covered by absurdist layers. It’s absurdism all the way down! It’s like some twisted form of enlightenment. To clarify I don’t say this in a necessarily negative light, I just think it’s interesting from the viewpoint of our species as a whole.

I know Gen-Z was experiencing a stage of wanting to assert real connections to the world against algorithmic forces, before covid that is, now I think we’re a little scattered again.

Zombiepirate ,
@Zombiepirate@lemmy.world avatar

I wouldn’t worry too much about the ranting of an out-of-touch opinion writer caught in a moral panic.

They’re just annoyed that the world is changing around them. People have made the same complaint about literally every generation before.

Jakeroxs ,

I was thinking about this last night because I saw this meme and felt like it was very “boomer humor” which got me thinking about how humor has seemingly changed throughout the years.

It does seem absurdism is much more common nowadays, however it’s not just that either, there’s layers of nuance usually that makes it “deeper” as well.

Would be interesting to see a deep dive on how humor has evolved through the years aside from my biases. You make an interesting point about it being “no connections to reality” but I’m not sure it’s entirely correct.

LEONHART ,
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