Culture Gen Alpha Finds Their Own Place in The English Language

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By Carly Owens
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Adjusting to the ever-changing language of Generation Alpha (born after 2010), has become a common challenge. Gen Z has become the newest old as Gen Alphas hit their pre and early teen years. Twelve-year-old Kentucky Local Braxton Falin’s newest favorite word is “rizz,” but many are scratching their heads wondering what that even means.

Other terms commonly used among Alpha are: preppy (girly), gyatt (big butt), sussy (suspicious), fanum tax (taking bits of someone’s food), mewing (model face) and alpha (superior). He said their language appears to be contextual, hence its inability to be well-defined.

Former Head of Activity Staff at Camp Webb in Knoxville, Brycen Hazelip, knows all too well about emerging Alpha culture, as he worked with this group closely.

“I think they enjoy that a lot of adults don't get it at all,” Hazelip said. “You can get many different explanations from many different kids [about what these terms mean].” The variety of responses by Alpha kids was not only noticed by Hazelip, but others as well.

When 11 year-old Drew Smith was asked what the term “skibidi” meant, he said it was a brain-rot term from his generation with no real meaning. When 12 year-old AJ Hazelip was asked the same question, she said, “I more use it as ‘dang it’ or (to be) funny.” Falin said it just means something is cool or happy.

Before Falin explained what ‘skibidi’ meant, he asked reporters if they were 'alpha' enough to know.

The origin of the term ‘skibidi’ actually comes from Bulgarian artist Biser King’s song “Dom Dom Yes Yes.” The inspirational line that sparked its popularity is, “shtibididob dob dob dob dob yes yes.”

The relationship between Z and Alpha isn’t the same as neighboring generations have had before.

“It does seem that there is more cooperation between Z and Alpha, than there was that I witnessed with Z and millennial,” Hazelip said.

Alpha is the first generation to entirely be born in the 21st century, which also means they will be the first generation to be born after the creation of Apple’s first iPhone in 2007. Much of the generation has grown up surrounded by digital technology, unlike Z who had a more hybrid experience between digital and traditional.

Hazelip said he may have a better capability to understand their new terminology because he is Gen Z and also grew up with the internet for a portion of his childhood.

In the United States, Basis Technologies reported that there are over 36 million kids aged zero to 11 that are active internet users. Alpha are digital natives, and Hazelip believes that their slang comes about because of influencer content that they consume on the internet.

Although he experienced Gen Alpha as their camp counselor, the children weren’t allowed to have any screen time. However, his involvement in working with these kids isn’t over as he is currently a lead instructor at Tiger Rock Martial Arts Studio in Knoxville.

At the studio, the children are granted tablet time during breaks in instruction. Hazelip has noticed a trend in the children who spend break time on their tablets typically being the same children using the newest Alpha slang.

Their slang is new, but can also be inappropriate.

“They love using ‘ahh’ as a replacement for ‘a**,’” Hazelip said.

He speculated that these types of terms are typical boundary pushing in adolescence, and the kids saying them are just trying to spark a reaction.

So as new as it seems, the linguistic tradition is old. Baby Boomers popularized the phrase “groovy,” Gen X popularized “gnarly,” Millennials had “YOLO,” and Gen Z created “and I oop.”

Whatever the case is for these new terms and phrases, they might just be a generational right of passage.
 
You can tell an out of touch Gen Z journalist (a demographic that will not be cool any more as soon is they start turning 30 in 2025) made this infographic and the article it came from because the only word that is even kind of Gen Alpha is skibidi. Every other word in this is zoomer and zillennial slang.

Anyway, good to see summer camps (or at least this one) has a no "mind control rectangle" rule. As for the great horrors beyond comprehension hiding in that "zero-to-11" line if you think about that first number, not so good.

Hopefully Gen Z starts enjoying the targeted ads for dishwasher parts, arthritis meds and life insurance as they fade into pop-cultural irrelevance!
 
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You can tell an out of touch Gen Z journalist (a demographic that will not be cool any more as soon is they start turning 30 in 2025) made this infographic and the article it came from because the only word that is even kind of Gen Alpha is skibidi.
I've never seen a generation's slang get so much attention. Usually it's just an opinion column here and there by a 90 year old man about how kids these days don't speak proper English, but it feels like Gen alpha slang gets a new article every day acting like the concept of slang is brand new and must be studied.

I've also - probably not coincidentally - never seen such a concerted effort to get a generation talking like a bunch of 70 IQ black drag queens. Most of the "alpha slang" I see in articles like this only exists on Reddit and Twitter. In other words, no human beings use it.
 
I've never seen a generation's slang get so much attention. Usually it's just an opinion column here and there by a 90 year old man about how kids these days don't speak proper English, but it feels like Gen alpha slang gets a new article every day acting like the concept of slang is brand new and must be studied.

I've also - probably not coincidentally - never seen such a concerted effort to get a generation talking like a bunch of 70 IQ black drag queens. Most of the "alpha slang" I see in articles like this only exists on Reddit and Twitter. In other words, no human beings use it.
There was actually a lot of it about my generation (90s millennials/zillennials) but most of the coverage of it has disappeared due to hyperlink rot over the years. I still remember the seethe at "process," but that one's basically been culturally memory-holed (unlike the "literally" thing).

But there's definitely way more of it for alphas than for zoomers, that's for sure.
 
A lot of what they call "slang" is actually not proper slang at all but rather memes. A lot of slang has actually entered "proper" usage because they referred to new concepts and ideas that either became mainstream or are at least recognizable. Sort of like how certain brand names can become a generic way to refer to the product itself, like kleenex. Nobody uses a lot of the slang these articles reference outside the internet because they're internet specific memes for the most part.
 
There was actually a lot of it about my generation (90s millennials/zillennials) but most of the coverage of it has disappeared due to hyperlink rot over the years. I still remember the seethe at "process," but that one's basically been culturally memory-holed (unlike the "literally" thing).

But there's definitely way more of it for alphas than for zoomers, that's for sure.
I'm OLD AS FUCK and I remember article after article about the rise of mysterious internet acronyms and whether or not your child is being brainwashed by them. Half of them were completely made up and half of the remainder were completely wrong. That's kind of similar to what we're seeing here, except back then there was no undertone of melanin superiority. It was just the fine folks over at Boomy Boom News Corporation being out of touch and clueless.

I never thought I'd miss the days when journalists were just retarded.
 
I've never seen a generation's slang get so much attention. Usually it's just an opinion column here and there by a 90 year old man about how kids these days don't speak proper English, but it feels like Gen alpha slang gets a new article every day acting like the concept of slang is brand new and must be studied.
Because we're desperate to create the cultural idea that every new cohort of young people born every 15 years or so is some kind of unique identity/label, a concept which benefits no one except marketing agencies.
 
There was actually a lot of it about my generation (90s millennials/zillennials) but most of the coverage of it has disappeared due to hyperlink rot over the years. I still remember the seethe at "process," but that one's basically been culturally memory-holed (unlike the "literally" thing).

But there's definitely way more of it for alphas than for zoomers, that's for sure.
I remember people getting annoyed at “epic” being used for everything, unlike literally everything literally happening, literally.

They want us to think like hysterical idiots.
 
Braxton Falin
That is a terrible name. Names should transcend generations and only change slowly. Parents who try to make their kids stand out by giving them weird names are part of the narcissistic problem.

In fact, maybe don't even give kids names until they have proven themselves to be a productive member of society. Make them fucking earn their grandparents name.
 
I've never seen a generation's slang get so much attention.
That's because this generational conflict thing has been weirdly amplified in recent years and now generational labels are "identities". Which is how you get sentences like this -
“It does seem that there is more cooperation between Z and Alpha, than there was that I witnessed with Z and millennial,” Hazelip said.
What does that mean? What does "cooperation between Z and Alpha" look like, and how is that different between Z and Millenial? Is it because TikTok was a Gen Z dominated app, and now Alpha are on it more? It doesn't really make any sense.
 
That is a terrible name. Names should transcend generations and only change slowly. Parents who try to make their kids stand out by giving them weird names are part of the narcissistic problem.

In fact, maybe don't even give kids names until they have proven themselves to be a productive member of society. Make them fucking earn their grandparents name.

Both this kid's names sound like last names. It makes it exrea awkward.

Also, some of this slang is just repurposed from old words. "Sus" has been around for decades. It's not as new as people think it is. "Preppy" doesn't mean girly. But girls can be preps. So it kinda works. I swear I've heard "Rizz" before. Isn't "Skibidi" a scat term? That goes back to the Jazz Age.
 
The origin of the term ‘skibidi’ actually comes from Bulgarian artist Biser King’s song “Dom Dom Yes Yes.” The inspirational line that sparked its popularity is, “shtibididob dob dob dob dob yes yes.”
Fucking journos are too lazy to find the actual origin, a youtube shitpost of a head on a toilet that sings
 
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