Re: Youth slang
- From: Bob Cunningham <exw6sxq@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 05 Aug 2007 04:12:41 -0700
On Sun, 05 Aug 2007 01:10:29 -0000, Mitch
<maharri@xxxxxxxxx> said:
On Aug 4, 12:28 pm, que.sara.saraDEL...@xxxxxxxxx (Sara Lorimer)
wrote:
Mitch <maha...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:...
(Knowing this is a terribly small sample...)
Executive summary: I don't think it's changing that much.
Are you sure you're up-to-date with the latest slang?
No. That is, no, I'm not sure. Or rather, I'm pretty sure that I'm
not. The point was that I would expect there to be all sorts of new
slang (and that may very well be so, nothing special comes to mind),
but what stands out is that I hear slang from my youth still being
used. Weird because it's not weird. Or something.
I've never been able to hear 'swell or 'groovy' except as old-
fashioned or period or ironic, but 'cool' I still hear being used in a
non-ironic way.
I've been so used over the years to accepting "great" as a
mere term of approval that its use to mean "large" tends to
seem a little strange to me.
Doctor: The patient has a great swelling in his foot.
Nurse: What's so great about a swelling? ... Oh, you mean
big.
.
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