• Glytch@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    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.

      • enthusiasticamoeba@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        You literally used the term “dunk on” like three comments ago. A bit hypocritical to criticize the use of slang, don’t you think?

          • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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            9 months ago

            You do know that you sound exactly like your parents, right? And their parents said the same too. Every friggin next generation does this, this is not news, man.

              • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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                9 months ago

                Again, a lot of your descriptions sound like kids being kids. Let them. It’s their generation, they have to figure things out just like we did

                On the “can’t be offline anymore” I’d agree, but that is a different problem altogether

          • Glytch@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            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 .

      • WoodScientist@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        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.

        • Snowclone@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          It’s funny how true it is. I speak completely differently than before I was a teen, and then after being a teen, and now that I have teenage kids, I don’t speak like when I was a teen either. then entire language I use on a daily basis has shifted at least twice in significant ways.