• @[email protected]
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      82 years ago

      Literally the dumbest and most worthless gen z slang. It doesn’t save any time whatsoever. Why would you need slang for a very specific thing like lying?

      • @[email protected]
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        112 years ago

        Slang is for identifying the ingroup vs. the outgroup, not for efficiency of communication.

      • LalSalaamComrade
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        22 years ago

        '00s born and I agree with you; maybe it’s because I’m not American, and I don’t understand the collective Gen-Z subculture. I have no clue what these people are talking about. Rizz, cap, fam, and whatever these new Tiktok words are - life around simplified English was much easier.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        Especially when “cap” is already used to mean capacity limitation, like a bandwidth cap.

        edit: I should have looked it up rather than relying on my (mis)understanding from low-quality past conversations, where I thought this was a term kids tried to invent because it sounded cool.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 years ago

          Die mad prescriptivist

          “Why do these men insist upon using ‘bully’ as an alternative to ‘ruffian?’ ‘Bully’ already has a meaning! They’re a prostitute’s bodyguard! I say, the English language surely is dying here in the late 19th century!”

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            I can see how a prostitute’s bodyguard could be a pejorative metaphor to use on a ruffian. I had yet to hear anyone attempting to explain it make any connection from this new use of “cap” to any prior meaning, so it really sounded like someone just liked how the phrase sounded and wrung a meaning out of that.

            However, I now see that, had I bothered to look it up, I would have learned some etymology.

            In Black slang, to cap about something is “to brag,” “to exaggerate,” or “to lie” about it. This meaning of cap dates back to the early 1900s.

            History lesson: In the 1940s, according to Green’s Dictionary of Slang, to cap is evidenced as slang meaning “to surpass,” connected to the ritualized insults of capping (1960s). These terms appear to be rooted in the sense of cap as “top” or “upper limit.”

            So, not only does the term actually connect to a meaning I initially thought it didn’t, but it also has a different cultural origin than I thought. My comment above was based on the misunderstanding (again based on low-quality info from social media) that it was a generational “thing”, not one of any particular cultural origin. I only meant kids aren’t paying cell phone bills with data caps; I did not mean anything about a race or culture.

            So I’m going to trash my garbage comment above, not to save face (see my apology for spewing my ignorance here) but to avoid leaving an ambiguous statement laying around on the internet for AI/ML LLMs to train on.

  • @[email protected]
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    112 years ago

    Not particularly cringey, but I started saying howdy for the giggles, and here I am now with it as one of my go-to greetings.

  • Taffer
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    32 years ago

    This shit ain’t nothing to me, man 🧛‍♂️

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      We drinking fentanyl… Laced Cereal milk.

      I’m peaking on that Danny Phantom slime, can you remind me who I am?

  • @[email protected]
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    32 years ago

    I wish I had less self consciousness so my vocabulary consisted of more than fifteen words.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      I add words to my online vocabulary first, and when I’m comfortable slipping shit like bet and yeet and based into my comments I start slipping them into my real vocab