• @[email protected]
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    774 months ago

    You know how it goes, first people start saying the silly meme phrase “ironically”, then they can’t stop themselves saying it, then it becomes awkwardly unironic, and then it gets embedded in the lexicon and Miriam-Webster adds it to the dictionary

    2060 is going to be lit fam AHEM I mean it’s going to be funny

      • @[email protected]
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        194 months ago

        Not to discredit your point, but 80 years ago was 1944, and everybody then would know what you mean by that 2nd sentence.

        Cool goes back to Shakespeare and beyond. But it was also popular in the American vernacular in the 1930s.

        • @WoahWoah
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          4 months ago

          “Cool” was hardly the only thing modern vernacular about that sentence. It’s use 80 years ago would not have the same meaning now, and in the syntax of the sentence would seem odd, much like the OP’s usage of contemporary slang.

          Believe it or not, just because a word has previously been used as slang doesn’t mean the meaning hasn’t shifted through time. See: “low-key.”

          • @[email protected]
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            44 months ago

            Sure, the point is that 80 years isn’t that long ago. And your example still wouldn’t be so obscure as to be unintelligible at that time, regardles. Believe it or not.

            • @WoahWoah
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              4 months ago

              I hear what you’re saying, but my original point was that even in 80 years, accepted syntax, vernacular usage, and general language construction can change quite a bit, so the OP post isn’t that odd. It’s still “intelligible,” and, indeed, language does change. Quite often, in fact.

              When I said “nearly unintelligible,” I meant it hyperbolicly to accentuate the fact that the modern language being highlighted by the OP is, similarly, not unintelligible. They are just examples of relatively new language use.

              I was highlighting the second sentence due to its modern syntax and the ways many of the words have grown to encompass broader meanings.

              Believe it or not, it didn’t even occur to me that “cool” was a slang word that might have shifted in the last 80 years, it’s so deeply embedded in my own idiomatic language that I was using it in that sentence as the word with historical stability in the sentence.

              Though, now that I’ve looked into the etymology, the usage in that sentence would also be a bit odd 80 years ago.

    • @[email protected]
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      54 months ago

      Merriam-Webster’s been adding stuff to the dictionary long before it’s even really embedded in the lexicon lately. Probably trying to stay relevant.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        fr fr ive thought that too over the past few years

        Although that said I just tried to find some examples to justify that sentiment… and all their newly minted words seem legit to me. Maybe I’m just a silly outdated millennial now

  • @[email protected]
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    614 months ago

    Are the front curls really such a zoomer thing? I’ve been dealin’ with’em for decades now because Arabic and Irish heritage means my hair is constantly in rebellion against british beauty standards

    • @GodricOP
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      374 months ago

      It’s become a zoomer thing. Last Xmas my friend’s little cousin of Polish and Polish heritage was rocking them instead of his usual arrow straight hair.

      • @Viking_Hippie
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        74 months ago

        cousin of Polish and Polish heritage

        Sure he doesn’t also has some Polish in him? Maybe a bit of Polish too?

    • flicker
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      344 months ago

      I imagine, with that heritage, every part of you is in constant rebellion against the British!

        • @Viking_Hippie
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          54 months ago

          With a name like Great Yarmouth Charter Academy, I’m guessing it’s just a case of “posh old fashioned British school being posh and old fashioned fuddy-duddies when confronted with anything that departs from their narrow view of propriety” 🤷

    • @TwoBeeSan
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      114 months ago

      Airplane hits tower… pilot yelling “KOBE”

    • danielbln
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      194 months ago

      The Brokkoli, it’s pretty fetch.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 months ago

        Stop 👏 trying 👏 to make 👏 fetch 👏 happen 👏👏👏

        Or is the clap more of a millennial thing 🤔

      • @RGB3x3
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        124 months ago

        It’s actually typically called the “Broccoli cut.”

        At least that’s the only way I’ve heard it.

  • Bloody Harry
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    4 months ago

    Why the heck is this in /c/shitpost? That’s a quality post and it belongs to the front page lmao

    • @HootinNHollerin
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      4 months ago

      Lemmy loves shit and poo this is where the nuggets hang

  • @jaybone
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    374 months ago

    Situation is very sus

  • @Glifted
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    304 months ago

    I know I’m old but what does ‘no cap’ mean?

    • @GodricOP
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      304 months ago

      It means you’re being On God Fr Fr about something

    • @[email protected]
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      194 months ago

      It means “I am not being capricious”

      Jk I have no clue and don’t care don’t correct me

    • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
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      164 months ago

      “Cap” is a lie or exaggeration.

      So “no cap” is “I’m not lying/I’m being serious.”

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        Do you by any chance know if this expression stems from twitch chat? I’ve heard the expression “No Kappa” pretty early there where kappa is the trollface of the platform often indicating something is meant ironically.

        On the flip side “No Cap” could indicate the absence of irony and therefore something bering dead serious

        • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
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          14 months ago

          If I remember correctly, it’s from a Travis Scott song. But I don’t typically listen to rap, so I wouldn’t know for sure.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 months ago

      popularized from the Young Thug and Future track of the same name:

      My bitch can’t sleep at my house
      Make her sleep at a hotel now
      And when you talk, man, you talking off cap
      And your diamonds they looking like tap
      I was always ducking from the paps
      Keep an R&B bitch in my lap
      Out in Beverly Hills, I adapt
      But I still had to ride with that strap

      Yellow diamonds like banana, that’s cap
      Put some dirty in Mello Yello, no cap
      Rocking Maison Margiela’s, that’s cap
      Red bitch, Cinderella, no cap
      I can turn perroI can turn Pedro
      Bad bitch out the ghetto

  • @pigup
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    214 months ago

    Bruh moment

    • @mack7400
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      44 months ago

      Aight imma head to my crib finna pop some caps yall

  • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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    134 months ago

    I was watching the Dick Clark’s Rockin’ New Year’s Eve from 1999 and immediately after the ball dropped they cut to a shot of the NYC skyline with the WTC intact.

    My Zoomer kid was shocked. Every time they’ve seen the WTC it’s been at the start of some 9/11 documentary.

      • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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        54 months ago

        So nothing they would have seen since they’re still kids and were born well after 2001

      • SuperDuper
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        54 months ago

        I don’t think the kids these days are watching a lot of “You’ve Got Mail”

        • @jaybone
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          24 months ago

          Wasn’t that in Seattle?

          • SuperDuper
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            04 months ago

            No, it’s set in Manhattan and features a number of filming locations in New York.

            • @jaybone
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              14 months ago

              I think I was thinking of Sleepless in Seattle which I think is the same movie.

      • @[email protected]
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        34 months ago

        Still kinda weird for me to see the NYC skyline without them tbh. And I was 10 when 911 occurred… and I’m not even American

  • @HelluvaKick
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    4 months ago

    Why does zoomer Bush look like Tony Khan?