"BAME". Suddenly everyone in the UK is using it, even right-wingers. I abhor the term "POC" but it's still better than "Blacks > Asians [Muslims] > all the other ~Minority Ethnics~"
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Anyone who says ”he's BAME” (pronounced bayme) is almost always a champagne socialist in my experience."BAME". Suddenly everyone in the UK is using it, even right-wingers. I abhor the term "POC" but it's still better than "Blacks > Asians [Muslims] > all the other ~Minority Ethnics~"
I think the first of this thing was someone stumbling over the old 'raughs/laughs in asian' meme. I doubt any of them realize it's based off of taking the piss out of engrish.“*Laughs in <relevant noun here>*”
I’m not sure where this got started - I think in a parody meme of some subtitled VH1 confessional - but anyone who uses it instantly sounds like a retard. Boorish Twitter types love using it as a smug flex or one-up and I just hate it.
Especially when those people use emoji question marks.When people put question marks everywhere like??? This??????
Often found in Tumblr or Twitter circles.
Especially because in reality, “safety/lives” nearly always means the former group’s feelings.I've always hated the phrase "*Insert group here*'s safety/lives over "insert group here*'s feelings" since it's used to shut down or deflect any dissenting opinion or criticism of their own beliefs because they know their own beliefs don't hold water.
When people put question marks everywhere like??? This??????
Often found in Tumblr or Twitter circles.
Social media, texting, and their consequences have been a disaster for the English language.People who overuse ellipses. I see it constantly in text and it can be misinterpreted or misused so many ways. Are they using them to imply pauses or thought? Are they trying to indicate a break or segue? Are they annoyed? Ellipses don’t need to be used in texting, usually see older people doing this the most.
same thing with adding a billion emojis to your texts. It looks ridiculous, especially if you’re an adult still doing this. One of my friends does this, love her but it gets annoying having to filter out the actual message from the giant pile of emojis in each one
And I'm willing to bet he gets bitched at if he dares mark them down for it, too.A relative of mine is a college professor, and has told me of students who write their essays like they would texts, or with horridly incorrect punctuation.
I feel like "self-respect" could be a better term. Self care is a perfectly fine concept if it means taking adequate care of yourself and keeping good habits.Self-Care
It just sounds gay as fuck. I looked it up and apparently it's a term that's been around since the 70's but I never saw or heard anyone use it until recently in the past couple of years.
On that note;The N-word now. It's in rap music, people sing along to it, say it while singing and people lose their shit. I get it's vulgar, but if it's in a song, if you don't want people to say it, then don't put it in the song.
That being said, it's going to come to a point where rap music may get "cancelled" because of its obscene lyrics. Then, it'll be trifling Black creativity or something. You know people want to cancel rap music, but it makes a lot of money.
White girls who USE it to sound "cute", when Black people use it, they sound ignorant. One slur shouldn't piss me off so much but it does. I don't see why White girls think being hip or Black is "cool."
Not just the history or intent behind it, but the inconsistency of how it's handled. Ghetto Black people (and occasionally the older demographic) use it interchangeably no problem. Another person in a different race says it, it's WW3.
Now, if I see or hear a White woman saying it, you're getting slapped on the ground.
I thought I was the only one who hates the word "tea" and "sis" being used in the context of gossip. It sounds so gay.If anyone uses the term "my truth" unironically, then they are probably pathological liars.
The term, "influencer," is obnoxious.
And don't even get me started on slang like "tea" and "sis."