• @[email protected]
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    471 year ago

    I had this conversation with one of my kids recently:

    Her: “This thing is gas!”

    Me: “Gas? Why are you talking like your grandpa in 1965?”

    Her: " What are you yapping about? They don’t know what ‘gas’ means!"

    Me: "You wanna bet? Ain’t you ever heard that Rolling Stones song? Jumpin’ Jack Flash, it’s a gas…?’

    Her: “Bruh…”

    Me: “Don’t shoot the messenger.”

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      331 year ago

      It’s amazing watching young adults discover that their new fad is a rehash of concepts that are decades old.

      • littleblue✨
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        81 year ago

        You mean bellbottoms and “cottage core” aren’t new & edgy? D’oh.

    • Flying Squid
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      201 year ago

      In the 90s, when everyone started using the word fat/phat, I found out from an article that it’s usage that way could be traced back to 1920s jazz musicians. Everything old is new again.

      • @ChickenLadyLovesLife
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        71 year ago

        I always thought the word “ginormous” (a portmanteau of gigantic and enormous) was totally modern, but then I read a book published in 1943 by a Battle of Britain Spitfire pilot which had “ginormous” in its glossary section.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Me looking at this meme nearing 40…“pretty sure we used sus and fire as teenagers”.

      Then again I didn’t grow up in USA and we had different “hip” words.

        • littleblue✨
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          1 year ago

          “Fire” goes back to at least the early 90s, when I was in highschool.