I don’t know if it even really counts as slang, but this happened to me and some buddies I played Rocket League with. Some guy kept spamming “Siiiick” in the quick chat for the littlest things, so we’d spam it back 3x as hard. Long story short, we still use it now like 7 or 8 years later.
I’ll say “What a save!” when my group screws up or loses because you can take me out of rocket league but you can’t take rocket league out of me.
I switched from what a save to this is rocket league because people have weak mentals and will give up and or throw the game if you what a save them lol
I read that in a hockey commentator voice
I don’t get past step 2
Happened to my friend when I was growing up with this exact phrase… This is so dated now
That’s wack.
That’s dope!
All that and a bag of chips!
And how!
No cap brother, no cap
Sheesh?
The early 2000s version of Sheesh or the 2020 version they thought they had come up with by themselves?
Try '80s. Get off my lawn.
Yikes
Whack
No no, just the one yike. Put the rest back
On God, this meme is bussin’ fr no cap
skibidi toilet
Lit still slaps fr but y’all can miss me with rizz no cap that’s shit is lidless, I get bitches newayz.
This is so fetch.
No Diddy chat, no Diddy hahah.
On God, I’m sus… Oh sus, on God, I’m sus right now
Bet
Honestly, I’m just glad we beat back “fire”. That one is still just super awkward sounding and lived the majority of its lifespan in obscurity.
My favorite reddit post of 2019 thanks kind stranger for reposting
Yeet.
No one uses much 1930s and 1940s Hep Cat slang anymore and that’s a real shame because Cab Calloway went out of his way to promote it.
https://flashbak.com/cab-calloways-hepsters-dictionary-a-guide-to-the-language-of-jive-1938-378657/
Sure, people still use “salty” to mean angry about something, but when was the last time you heard someone “creeping out like the shadow?”
I love this link.
Considering it’s coming up pretty close to being a century old, I’m actually surprised how much of this has made it into the common lexicon.
I feel like even the etymology on capped could be interesting and maybe share a common source with modern cap.
fr no cap
I have a teenager and repeating slang I don’t understand in slow sentance with over bloated words and a New England accent is one of my favorite past times.
I refuse to succumb to “yeet.” Is it still around much?
I once heard it described as a verb tense of “yoink” and that made me feel a lot better about it slipping into my regular usage.
I’m still cheugy af tho, according to my 26 year old roommate, so maybe don’t take advice from me.
Take it easy, homeslice xx
As far as I know it’s the opposite of yoink.
Yoink = taking something quite aggressively. Yeet = throwing about something.
It’s just a synonym for throwing something now
Throwing suddenly and imprecisely. You wouldn’t call a baseball pitch a yeet.
You would call throwing the ball from the furthest spot in center left field home a yeet though. As I have observed in youth baseball
No, it isn’t.
Yeet has been yote
Yeed.
fr fr rizz jizz no jive turkey