It’s such a bizarre list too.
They’re not cusses. What’s wrong with “love that for you”? I could’ve easily seen myself saying that in 2009, is the meaning vastly different than what I think?
Bless your heart
It took me a while to realize this wasn’t a lookup table
Me too. Felt old before realizing it wasn’t a lookup table and then felt older after realizing it was a simple list.
My school district is WAY smarter than this, all the teachers and staff just start saying the words more than the kids do until they think it’s corny.
This
Making lists like that is authoritarian and won’t work. Making the words worthless works
Why is it even a goal to stop kids saying these words
Because some adults feel out of touch and must crush the new slang while forgetting that the same thing happened to them as kids until their slang became common parlance. Eventually this current crop of kids will do the same to the next generation and the cycle will continue.
What? You mean language changes? I can’t take it, that’s literally insane!
Because schools are supposed to be raising up people who speak in a way that can be understood and indicates some intelligence.
Languages are primarily created and evolved by teenagers. It’s always been this way. Each new generation finds new ways of contextualizing the world, and new ways of explaining aspects of it. Teenagers create tons of new experimental words. Most have short half-lives and peter out over time. Some turn out to be genuinely linguistically useful and survive the test of time.
It’s a safe bet that the vast majority of words you use on a daily basis were first uttered by a teenager somewhere in the recent or distant past.
Language evolves through teens.
You literally used the term “dunk on” like three comments ago. A bit hypocritical to criticize the use of slang, don’t you think?
I mean, fair enough. But have you heard kids these days? Between the algorithmic feedback loop that is the modern internet, the disinterest of parents in actually parenting their kids, and chatgpt… I don’t think it’s unreasonable to be a bit concerned about how uneducated the children in our education system are coming off. It’s not me being classist, it’s valid criticism of a systemic failing.
It’s actually you being ageist and not understanding how languages work. Your complaint is identical to Boomers complaining about how Gen Xers and Millennials talk just with updated tech. It’s a cycle that goes back many generations. The lack of funding for education actually has little to do with it .
Maybe this is why republicans watch child porn so they think it’s corny and nobody else does it anymore.
I am almost 28 and use way more gen z/alpha slang than my 21 year old sister does. It becomes your permanent lexicon after a while and you keep using the words no matter how outdated they are. I say yeet at least once a day still.
Unironically started saying hella after life is strange made me cringe out of my fucking seat when the characters say it.
Reclaim it like slurs. Lmfao
I have been saying “groovy” for as long as I have been aware that the word existed, and that’s early 70s
Far out.
Right on!
Tubular
I say hella every day. Slang accentuates speech and makes it fun, so I use a lot of it. Not an obnoxious amount, though. Gotta get the slang amount just right, just like swearing. It’s an art.
I don’t use skibidi because it’s too long to easily work into sentences casually. Also it’s a really fucking dumb word that feels wrong saying. Like I tried it a few times and cringed so hard I thought I was gonna flip inside out or some shit. My soul started leaving my body.
Lol that’s hella awesome
I can imagine that working, actually.
As a teacher, I can attest that it works beautifully.
“Ill bless you Youngins🥷 with the Rizz🔥 your gonna need for the low 🔑test on Monday, no cap 🧢💯!!!”
That’s out of pocket!
Students, I’m a total baka hentai amirite?
Guys??
Bruh, on God I’m not even gonna cap - you’re being such a sigma male with that low key bussin mood, but say less about the rizz because you’re doing too much with that type shit. Gucci fit, and I love that for you, but it’s giving major gyatt energy, so no cap, that’s high key straight fire, baka!
Bet
Demerits for misuse of “say less” and “baka”. Other than that, high marks!
“Say less” is etymologically tied to “say no more”. It is possible that I am wrong about “baka”, because I’m an otaku, but I presume they’re using it in the anime way, and not just completely divorcing it from its actual meaning. I might be giving them to much credit.
Doest baka more or less just mean “idiot\stupud”?
Yep
Then it looks like his statement makes total cringe sense.
You know what, you’re right, the preceding sentence is supposed to be critical of the listener, so they are actually misusing “straight fire”, which would imply something good.
So “on God” means like “on God’s authority” or “for reals”?
It’s short for “I swear on god”
Even using “on” like that is a young zoomer thing I think.
I hear “on accident” a lot and it wasn’t a thing back in the day.
Can we get a date on this? I don’t see skibidi or sus. And I’m most surprised to see the youths embracing finna
Skibidi isn’t on the list because no one unironically says skibidi. If you think they are, they’re trolling you.
I didn’t think unironic usage was a prereq for this list, just overuse/disruptive to a classroom
Based on my experience in the NE U.S., this list is current.
hastily scribbles fetch on the board
Stop trying to make fetch happen.
Streets ahead of you
Inappropes
I hate finna more than all the others.
it’s AAVE, not made up, and there’s literally no reason why “gonna” should be more legit. it’s the exact same construction.
I mean it’s as made up as any other slang
why do i never hear someone bitch about “gonna” then
Because “gonna” is centuries old, while “finna” only started getting popular around 2010.
Not exactly an apples to apples comparison, ‘younger’ slang is always going to be less ‘familiar’/‘normal’-sounding.
You’re not old enough. Teachers bitched about ‘gonna’ when I was a kid, it’s old hat now.
“All slang is made up” and “a lot of people are racist (or at the very least ignorant)” are not mutually exclusive statements. Finna is equally as “made up” as gonna or even skibbity.
i know but my point is that this is pointless pedantry.
True, I just suppose I feel saying a word is or isn’t made up doesn’t really mean anything, versus saying a word is actually actively used and understood by a group of people.
None of those words will make me like it.
“Going to” is far superior to “fixing to,” so I don’t know what you are talking about.
They don’t really mean the exact same thing, or at least not in my dialect. “Fixing to” implies that the thing will happen imminently, not just in the future.
Fair enough. I do think that connotation doesn’t necessarily carry over to the “gonna” and “finna” forms, but it’s a good point.
That said, “fixing to” still grates on my brain in ways I can’t begin to describe.
Why do you think it’s superior?
That’s a fair question. My most honest answer isn’t a very good one: I can’t stand it.
Linguistically, I don’t get it. “Fixing to” doesn’t seem to offer any benefit over “about to” or “going to” and as far as I can tell it doesn’t have any logical meaning at all.
but that’s not how language works. if you’re gonna dissect parts of phrases like this, “about to” makes even less sense.
So, just for clarification, you’re ok with “boutta”?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3QQDAKxUIk from a linguist about finna (and gonna and other things)
Yesssss it’s language Jones!
If my kid ever comes home from school with a picture like this I’m having words with the teacher. Let the children have their fun ffs
The principal is getting a 3 hour tense but polite discussion on prescriptivism vs descriptivism and he’s going to be defending descriptivism whether he likes it or nor and he’s going to lose the entire while being simply unable to hangup. This will never happen again.
You doin too much
Love that for you
Why?
Also, you can’t stop language from changing. Change is certain. We don’t talk like people 100 years ago and that’s a good thing.
Those are phrases that get repeated verbatim as responses, which is the hypothetical reason they might be included on this (maaaaybe fake?) list. I’m actually slightly tired of them too, I have a couple students that really overuse them as responses to everything.
…Though I’d never be dumb enough to tell them that.Yeah making a list like this deserves doubling down on that kind of slang.
I’m betting (hoping?) this was done with a bit of tongue in cheek, especially since there’s a nice, close up picture of the list and it uses up significant board real estate.
Humbling kids with some self awareness is great, especially in middle school. Self reflection and metacognition (why do we do what we do?) are super important tools for kids and leads to more empathy and better conflict resolution.
If this is just a teacher being a crotchety conservative, then yeah, you’re right. But I’m willing to bet the kids even helped make the list and had a good time doing it.
Love that for you
Yeah, they forgot to put “on my soul” on the list, though the kids at my school are all illiterate, so they just parrot it as “oh my SO”.
Every. Five. Seconds.
The correct solution here is to just use these back at them at every opportunity. I feed on the cringe every time they say they didn’t do something and I get the privilege to respond, flatly and with enunciation: “Cap.”
My guess is they are used sarcastically/ironically and whoever made the board is sick of hearing them.
start listing them out continuously untill you get expelled
Kids are gonna kids
I don’t understand what teachers think a “banned words list” is gonna accomplish except being the new target of bored kids/teens
(Unless they’re just tired of hearing it, but this isn’t a good solution imo)
Finna has come back?
It’s never gone away!
Literally 1984
On my list …
Um
Like
Perfect
Know what I mean?
End of the day.
Linux meme?
deleted by creator
It is what it is.
Why you gotta hate on Ernest like that?
Who?
Ernest P. Worrell, of course!
https://youtu.be/G1G7KQZpP3c?t=42
Jim Varney’s character — with “knowwhatImean, Vern?” as his catchphrase — was so successful that he went from doing cheap commercials for local TV to become a legitimate movie star.