It's more 2000s. I remember in 2010 or so having a male coworker explain to me what a "bro" was as a noun to describe men exhibiting I guess I would have called "frat guy" behavior before.
It was a west coast thing. When I lived in Utah and worked a ski resorts in the late 90’s we definitely said Bra a lot. We still used dude a lot but Bra was up there too
She's a teacher and doesn't even know how to write contractions. That's terrifying.\
'90s: a contraction for the 1990s.\
90's: a possessive noun for the year 1990.
She's a teacher and doesn't even know how to write contractions. That's terrifying.\ '90s: a contraction for the 1990s.\ 90's: a possessive noun for the year 1990.
Doesn't this mean it should've read {'90's slang}? To show the contraction of the year, and the possessive with the word slang?
Psych and psyched were two different things. You would say psych when you were joking or just kidding about something (you're shirt's on backwards - psych!). And you would say you were psyched when you were excited about something (I am super psyched to go to the Rancid show tomorrow night).
There was also psyching somebody up, psyching somebody out, and going to psych class.
But yeah, I don't ever remember psych being spelled syke.
At university the snowboarding club captain (who was honest-to-god straight-edge Republican) wrote an email to the members telling them to "bring their stoke" which the school administration flagged as a drug reference.
If you're gonna get peeved, know that psyche is pronounced with a long e like the greek princess Cupid crushed on or the ineffable total of the human mind.
I still say "I'mma bounce" when I'm leaving. I work with people all under 25, most are teens. I just realized they may have no idea what I'm talking about.
Also, stoked will never die. Sometimes I'll "get hype", but stoked will always be my go to.
I lived in Utah and worked at ski resorts in the late 90’s and hella and bra were definitely being slung around a lot. I was originally from the midwest and moved back in the mid 2000’s by then even in the midwest people were saying hella
Can confirm, I have cousins from CA and when they came through visit us in New Orleans, my lil cousins would use both and then try to emulate my dad's rendition of bruh, by saying "Saaay bruh!"
It's actually hecka, all one word. But that's like the Mormon way of saying hella. In Norcal it would've been 'that's hella tight, bra." And then I would have punched you in the face because it was SO ANNOYING.
What about OG? I need to know, do the kids know what OG means? Has it made it into the Oxford dictionary? I say it like everyone knows what it means but do they know?
Dude, lame, whatever, bitchin were all pretty common. We had "suss" but it meant to look into or figure something out, not "suspect" or "suspicious". Did anyone else have the weird hand-symbol thing "WSM" with "Whatever Spunky Monkey" or was that strictly a my-town thing?
Not sure if it's an East coast thing, but I literally don't think I heard one person say brah. It was dude. Everything was dude. We're you a girl? No lol, no you weren't...you were dude.
It might have to do with your proximity to British English is the only thing I can surmise. I grew up in eastern USA, and although we were aware that people said "brah" it was almost always associated with the West, AKA California
brah/brä/"Brah" is an informal term for a male friend or "brother," originating from Hawaiian Pidgin ("braddah") and popular in surf, skate, and relaxed cultures. It is used similarly to "dude" or "mate", often serving as a laid-back, affectionate, or ironic greeting or address.
Music, films and TV have been projecting the slang of surf-loving Valley kids (whose parents are Holloywood big-wigs) onto the American psyche since the '50s. Those kids co-mingle with Hawaiians.
Okay kids, so when you're mad at your friends, you can call them a "buttwad," or a "buttmunch," or a "fart knocker," or a "fart blossom." These insults all imply your friend has an intimate association with butts and their various parts and inner workings, which is a very insulting accusation.
Okay kids, now say it with me: "Shut up, you buttwadding fart-knockers! You're all total buttmunching, fart blossoms. Suck it!!" Very good.
Express-Fennel-3564@reddit
Reminds me of when Stoney is teaching Link how to blend in.
Danny-Wah@reddit
No ma'am.. we said 'dude'.
fuelvolts@reddit
Yeah nobody said bra in the 90s. It was all dude.
E-2theRescue@reddit
"Bro" was the one that we used.
jcstrat@reddit
I don’t remember anyone saying bro in the 90s.
Broad_Tie9383@reddit
It's more 2000s. I remember in 2010 or so having a male coworker explain to me what a "bro" was as a noun to describe men exhibiting I guess I would have called "frat guy" behavior before.
marbotty@reddit
*homie
sick_of-it-all@reddit
Or cuz. Or kid. I said "kid" a lot.
inabighat@reddit
I still say dude multiple times a day. I call my daughter dude (and my son for that matter)
ThrobbingMinotaur@reddit
frankreynoldsrumham@reddit
I tried explaining this to someone recently. lol
BloodyEyeGames@reddit
Are you like, "Hey, For That Matter, grab me a beer from the fridge, eh?"?
inabighat@reddit
My dad used to send me across 6 lanes of traffic to buy him smokes when I was 5. A beer from the fridge is nothing ;)
BloodyEyeGames@reddit
Well, you didn't deny naming your kid For That Matter, so I'm gonna try and keep this bad joke going for as long as I can!
brainvheart143@reddit
It’s a genderless term for sure
BigFatBlackCat@reddit
We absolutely said Brah.
BobbyGuano@reddit
It was a west coast thing. When I lived in Utah and worked a ski resorts in the late 90’s we definitely said Bra a lot. We still used dude a lot but Bra was up there too
brainvheart143@reddit
Shaka brah
Illystylez619@reddit
No it isnt. I'm from the West Coast and said Dude and Bro...still do.
antwan_benjamin@reddit
Same. "Dude" and "Bro" was Full California slang. Meaning...people from all demographics in both NorCal and SoCal said both.
"Brah" was only specifically used by white people in the beach scene.
gnark@reddit
Non-white Hawaiians definitely said "brah" in the '90s.
BobbyGuano@reddit
Me and my snowboarder friends used “Brah” a fucking ton in the late 90’s. Yes we still used dude.
Illystylez619@reddit
That part. 😆
BobbyGuano@reddit
Ok so YOU didn’t use it. Me and my snowboarder friends used Bra/Brah a fuck ton in the late 90’s.
body_by_monsanto@reddit
Yeah, I thought bra was more early 2000s
Interesting-Sock-420@reddit
Dude, what does mine say?
mizushimo@reddit
Bra was later for sure
JJBell@reddit
I’m not your dude, bro. 😎
DrButtgerms@reddit
Still do, but we used to too
TerpeneTiger@reddit
Thanks Mitch. And yep. I still use a lot of these terms.
brainvheart143@reddit
Yeah she is not an elder millennial
_awk_girl_ward_@reddit
Yeah, dude was what I was expecting her to say
Delicious-Pie8944@reddit
Let’s not sleep on homie, home boy, homes, and Sherlock. Also the classic, “no shit, Sherlock”
Broad_Tie9383@reddit
My kid was just complaining that teachers were still saying "bruh" trying to relate to them, but no one says it anymore.
aIvins_hot_juicebox@reddit
Cool beans
JJBell@reddit
NoContextCarl@reddit
SHUT YOUR WHORE MOUTH. THAT ONE NEEDS TO DIE.
BigFatBlackCat@reddit
There are certain situations in which throwing out a “cool beans” can be the most perfect, brutal response to someone acting a fool.
thorsbeardexpress@reddit
Lies
sakkadesu@reddit
I told this one to my British-Asian wife (who has a fairly posh accent) and she now says this frequently with a desi accent...
Pree-chee-ate-cha@reddit
OscarDivine@reddit
It was Wiggity Wack that she didn’t use wiggity wack.
Pony829@reddit
Hecka tight? That is the lamest.....
Forsaken_Fig_@reddit
Posers lol
kellybelly4815@reddit
I am bringing “posers” back. Especially with all these posers out here using AI to pass themselves off as artists and musicians.
Subject_Command5442@reddit
WORD
LeftHandStir@reddit
I still use "word."
VoidOmatic@reddit
Word and dawg will NEVER never leave my vocabulary.
CalmTheAngryVoice@reddit
Word
rosephoenix19@reddit
Word.
forbins@reddit
Weeeerrrrrrddd
BigFatBlackCat@reddit
Word?
DETRITUS_TROLL@reddit
to your moms, I came to drop bombs...
Delicious-Pie8944@reddit
…to your mama
kbrick1@reddit
Please it’s motha
Subject_Command5442@reddit
Yo mama!
rosephoenix19@reddit
Your mama so fat....her blood type is vanilla!
CaptinEmergency@reddit
The internet used to come in the mail.
BloggerCurious@reddit
Sears Catalog!
VoidOmatic@reddit
WishieWashie12@reddit
Every week, non stop. Disks with free trials. CDroms in your cereal box. AOL just kept sending disks everywhere.
SoCalFelipe@reddit
You've got mail!
luckyfucker13@reddit
I heard it
666TripleSick@reddit
Bra
meenie@reddit
This baby had all the pages on the internet in it! Even IP Addresses for things lol
golgiiguy@reddit
We also so use to go to these places called "malls"
kalitarios@reddit
Pet peeve: when people type “syke” instead of psyche
“Get psyched up” was the original phrase
Get psyched out / psyche someone out
SaveusJebus@reddit
I don't think I ever saw someone spell it back in the day and I always imagined it as "sike"
Zeqhanis@reddit
She's a teacher and doesn't even know how to write contractions. That's terrifying.\ '90s: a contraction for the 1990s.\ 90's: a possessive noun for the year 1990.
Final-Entertainer807@reddit
Is it really that important at the end of the day?
SubstanceNo1544@reddit
Making sure the teacher teaches the kid properly? Dude...
Final-Entertainer807@reddit
You're drawing on the bare minimum of evidence for that assumption.
That would be like me assuming you failed science when it's mostly just poor reasoning in this one area.
SubstanceNo1544@reddit
CalmTheAngryVoice@reddit
Yes.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
possessive noun is correct. it is 90's slang. arguably it should be 90s'.
Zeqhanis@reddit
Yes. 90s' or '90s' would be the plural possessive. (Ignoring the fact that I'm technically using foot marks and not apostrophes at all.)
ZaphodBeeblebrahx@reddit
She’s a “teacher” and her credentials are the internet.
antwan_benjamin@reddit
Doesn't this mean it should've read {'90's slang}? To show the contraction of the year, and the possessive with the word slang?
jambr380@reddit
Psych and psyched were two different things. You would say psych when you were joking or just kidding about something (you're shirt's on backwards - psych!). And you would say you were psyched when you were excited about something (I am super psyched to go to the Rancid show tomorrow night).
There was also psyching somebody up, psyching somebody out, and going to psych class.
But yeah, I don't ever remember psych being spelled syke.
Ilikedinosaurs2023@reddit
I totally spelled it 'p-s-y-c-h' --- sike! (Why have I always spelled it 'sike' ? Not sure where I got that.. 🤔
tettoffensive@reddit
Another one. Almost everyone I know writes “word” but it’s actually “werd”
GuySmiley369@reddit
Except it is “word”. Meant as a question like “for real” as in “is that the word?”. Werd was a just a slang misspelling that started later.
ratpH1nk@reddit
there are 2 slang words at play here.
there is psyched like get excited/hyped up go back to the 80s and it was stoked
there is also Syke/psych/sike which is a little more 80s and was more like a lie, like you tricked somebody
great "contemporary" example that launched the meme --
gnark@reddit
At university the snowboarding club captain (who was honest-to-god straight-edge Republican) wrote an email to the members telling them to "bring their stoke" which the school administration flagged as a drug reference.
karabeckian@reddit
If you're gonna get peeved, know that psyche is pronounced with a long e like the greek princess Cupid crushed on or the ineffable total of the human mind.
You're looking for psych, like the tv show.
queenofcaffeine76@reddit
I've heard it both ways
kalitarios@reddit
You’re correct, my bad!
karabeckian@reddit
Props!
toomanyusesforaname@reddit
Man, you and me both. This has been pissing me off for 35 years.
toneloc89@reddit
"listen up, this'll be on the quiz".. legend!
BloggerCurious@reddit
I haven't heard sketch in such a long time
DrButtgerms@reddit
I use it regularly in a professional setting
Shoddy_Intention_705@reddit
My boss uses it regularly when she's describing people's poor performance
nohombrenombre@reddit
I still say it and haven’t thought about it being outdated haha
ChickenBossChiefsFan@reddit
I still say "I'mma bounce" when I'm leaving. I work with people all under 25, most are teens. I just realized they may have no idea what I'm talking about.
Also, stoked will never die. Sometimes I'll "get hype", but stoked will always be my go to.
nohombrenombre@reddit
Yes! Now, what about “whack”? I still say it in disbelieving situations. Did that ever go out?
kchoze@reddit
I remember it more as "sketchy", not just "sketch".
AnticitizenPrime@reddit
In my neck of the woods it was 'shady'.
gellshayngel@reddit
So long, I forgot about it lol.
noonelikesyou2@reddit
That’s kinda sketch.
sakkadesu@reddit
I remember the guys in my class always saying 'burn!' and 'toast!' and fml, 'serenity now' after that Seinlfed episode.
Haunting-Mortgage@reddit
Literally never heard "heck of tight bra" but maybe it's a California thing.
sakkadesu@reddit
it sounds very west coast skater
BobbyGuano@reddit
I lived in Utah and worked at ski resorts in the late 90’s and hella and bra were definitely being slung around a lot. I was originally from the midwest and moved back in the mid 2000’s by then even in the midwest people were saying hella
DrButtgerms@reddit
"hecka", like "heckin", was exclusively homeschool nerd words back then, but for context I didn't see a real life Mormon until college
CreamyHampers@reddit
Hecka was what kids said around their parents.
DrButtgerms@reddit
Not me or my friends
CreamyHampers@reddit
May i ask where you are from? Because this is true of everyone I knew here in the Bay Area.
DrButtgerms@reddit
Northeast. Idk what you all did on the west coast
plastiquearse@reddit
Hella heads at the party.
It’s just regional language. Down in SoCal you’d get hate for saying hella. Up in the Bay you get shit for calling a freeway ‘the 580’.
Hawaiian braddahs have so much slang. Surf and skate a ski cultures, too. It’s just a small token of having that shared cultural identity.
CreamyHampers@reddit
Ah, makes sense.
pluralofoctopus@reddit
It was "hella", and definitely a California thing. Probably changed for the kids.
CreamyHampers@reddit
Hecka was the PG version of hella we would say when we were young because hella was a curse word.
el_pinko_grande@reddit
Northern California. Say that in SoCal, and you will get looks.
davwad2@reddit
Can confirm, I have cousins from CA and when they came through visit us in New Orleans, my lil cousins would use both and then try to emulate my dad's rendition of bruh, by saying "Saaay bruh!"
Vox_Mortem@reddit
It's actually hecka, all one word. But that's like the Mormon way of saying hella. In Norcal it would've been 'that's hella tight, bra." And then I would have punched you in the face because it was SO ANNOYING.
Most of us still just said dude, sometimes bro.
PsyOpBunnyHop@reddit
boy: "Damn. That's hella tight, bro."
girl: "Dude, don't call me bro."
boy: "My bad. Sorry, dude."
girl: "It's cool. We tight."
prodigaldummy@reddit
Specifically a Norcal thing.
nucl3ar0ne@reddit
Same
AngryTree76@reddit
Can confirm it is a Cali thing--though I would have said it as "hecka tight, brah"
sakkadesu@reddit
this is just a reminder that I never used slang beyond cool, dude and awesome.
PapaTua@reddit
YO, HOME SLICE, I'M OUTIE 5000!***
Perfect_Caregiver_90@reddit
Audi 5000.
PapaTua@reddit
I think both are acceptable. Around me it definitely started as outtie, but eventually morphed into audi because it was clever.
MrChichibadman@reddit
I think it was always Audi, it’s a play on words.
BigFatBlackCat@reddit
What about OG? I need to know, do the kids know what OG means? Has it made it into the Oxford dictionary? I say it like everyone knows what it means but do they know?
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
i'm not sure they do know original grammar tbh
rythmicjea@reddit
She says all of that in the most white way lol
the_owl_syndicate@reddit
I was cringing listening to her, it was low key embarassing.
Late_Combination702@reddit
kbrick1@reddit
But you know all of us melanin-deficient Xennials sounded exactly like that. It hurts to listen to because it is
CarbonInTheWind@reddit
As was tradition. At least in the Midwest 😂
nakedcellist@reddit
That's so fetch!
VVrayth@reddit
Roguebantha42@reddit
...excuse me!
Angelkrista@reddit
Exsqueeze me***
whisar09@reddit
Baking powder?
_awk_girl_ward_@reddit
Asssphincter says what
Fine_Violinist5802@reddit
You want me to what... Like I don't *get it
whisar09@reddit
What?
ladyzowy@reddit
Hehehe
Proud_Aspect4452@reddit
This lady wasn’t popular in high school
cobalt-radiant@reddit
Nobody where I lived said "bra"
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
that's unfortunate.
ospfpacket@reddit
She is so very uncool now
batman648@reddit
If I ever teach. I’m using this as a lesson plan.
Tsunamiis@reddit
Homie don’t play that!
MsModusOperandi@reddit
Dude, lame, whatever, bitchin were all pretty common. We had "suss" but it meant to look into or figure something out, not "suspect" or "suspicious". Did anyone else have the weird hand-symbol thing "WSM" with "Whatever Spunky Monkey" or was that strictly a my-town thing?
NaturalSpecialist5@reddit
This is so white.
The_Goondocks@reddit
'90s
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
'90s' week.
the week belonging to the 1990s.
serenityplough@reddit
Here’s the 411.

Jefflehem@reddit
I must have missed whatever the fuck "heck of tight" was. I don't know anyone who said that.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
chill daddio. it's just a kid-friendly version of hella tight.
pharaohmaones@reddit
‘Heck of’ for the kids is killing me.
doompines@reddit
Neither here nor there, but I thought it was "I'm outtie 5000" for way, way too long. 🤣
AfraidRevolution4613@reddit
You thought that because it was that.
...wasn't it?
doompines@reddit
No, apparently it's AUDI 5000!
AfraidRevolution4613@reddit
Oh my goodness!
________76________@reddit
We said 'outie fivethoutie'
element-2012@reddit
We're just going to leave out "tight"? And I will forever get hearts in my eyes over the fact that "bet" came back
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
not leaving that out is tight.
https://i.redd.it/c9u686ksdfzg1.gif
nohombrenombre@reddit
element-2012@reddit
She should have her teaching credentials revoked for failing to include this!
RadTimeWizard@reddit
This shit right here is why gen z calls us cringe.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
kwikane@reddit
Nobody worth talking to talks like that
kbrick1@reddit
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
yeah nah you're right.
NOOOOOT!
forbins@reddit
What about weak?
Like, “weak sauce bro,” or “shits weak.”
kbrick1@reddit
…do people not say weak anymore?
Ruh Roh. I’d be upset if I cared.
AsideLost@reddit
“Grill”= face, “Clowned”= made to look the fool, “Snaked” = taking something, “Pimping”= talking to girls, “Sport/Sporting”= wearing something
kbrick1@reddit
We really used pimp and pimping way too much
Evening_Ad_1099@reddit
I remember using "dis" a lot
gnark@reddit
What else would you call a "dis track" on a rap album?
Evening_Ad_1099@reddit
Deez....
jambr380@reddit
I still use it a lot. I really don't even have another word for it. Insult sounds too proper most of the time.
Some people used dis instead of this, though, and that was pretty rough
beefwindowtreatment@reddit
History class has taken a strange turn.
No-Acanthisitta7930@reddit
Not sure if it's an East coast thing, but I literally don't think I heard one person say brah. It was dude. Everything was dude. We're you a girl? No lol, no you weren't...you were dude.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
i'm kiwi and we said brah and bruv all the time in the 90s 🤷♂️
No-Acanthisitta7930@reddit
It might have to do with your proximity to British English is the only thing I can surmise. I grew up in eastern USA, and although we were aware that people said "brah" it was almost always associated with the West, AKA California
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
either way, it's all valid 90s slang 🤷♂️
No-Acanthisitta7930@reddit
Oh 100% no doubt
BigBubbaMac@reddit
I still use all these slangs on a regular basis.
anythingspossible45@reddit
Oh, this is great
Paddlesons@reddit
Any formulation of "bro" was not common parlance of said decade.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
Paddlesons@reddit
Lmao
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
https://i.redd.it/qq1olv0c3fzg1.gif
DJMagicHandz@reddit
Ayo, what's the 411, Hun?
MyNameCannotBeSpoken@reddit
There were definitely ethic and regional differences in how slang was used and pronounced both then and now. She's not entirely accurate.
Pree-chee-ate-cha@reddit
This video is all that and a bag o’ chips.
1877KlownsForKids@reddit
Gag me with a spoon!
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
Cael_NaMaor@reddit
Wow... um. Yeah... I never used any of that unironically.
karabeckian@reddit
woosh
Cael_NaMaor@reddit
What are wooshing?
karabeckian@reddit
I was under the impression this was an ironic video...
Cael_NaMaor@reddit
I thought it was a tracher having a week of silliness for her students. 🤷🏼♂️
karabeckian@reddit
Exactly.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
it is unironically educational.
T1m3Wizard@reddit
There's a class for this??
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
it's just social studies 🤷♂️
sick_of-it-all@reddit
Kristen Wiig on Flight of the Conchords. "My name is Brah-brah. B r a h... b r a h.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
woo! a concord reference i n the wild! aotearoa represent! 🤙
Designer-Bid-3155@reddit
C'mon son
gnark@reddit
Dude, really?
Designer-Bid-3155@reddit
I've heard it both ways..
Administrative-Flan9@reddit
I hope this is fake because a teacher using class to generate content for the socials is pretty unprofessional.
gnark@reddit
Tell me you're on the spectrum without directly saying so...
karabeckian@reddit
brah/brä/"Brah" is an informal term for a male friend or "brother," originating from Hawaiian Pidgin ("braddah") and popular in surf, skate, and relaxed cultures. It is used similarly to "dude" or "mate", often serving as a laid-back, affectionate, or ironic greeting or address.
Teach dropped the H and the ball.
Gen A is cooked.
ialsohaveadobro@reddit
I guarantee "brah" does not derive from Hawaiian Pidgin. I mean, how far do you think Hawaiian Pidgin spread? It's a coincidence.
gnark@reddit
Music, films and TV have been projecting the slang of surf-loving Valley kids (whose parents are Holloywood big-wigs) onto the American psyche since the '50s. Those kids co-mingle with Hawaiians.
karabeckian@reddit
https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=brah
Seems there's some debate about SoCal vs Hawaii but I first picked it up in the early 90's from a friend from Florida so ¯_(ツ)_/¯
DrButtgerms@reddit
In the Northeast, we were "bro" and (at least in my town) never bra/brah unless it was ironically, usually to make fun of stoners.
I would have guessed is was an east/west thing, but folks here said bra/brah was in FL
chawrawbeef@reddit
it’s like a g dawg on the fly tip
VectorJones@reddit
Okay kids, so when you're mad at your friends, you can call them a "buttwad," or a "buttmunch," or a "fart knocker," or a "fart blossom." These insults all imply your friend has an intimate association with butts and their various parts and inner workings, which is a very insulting accusation.
Okay kids, now say it with me: "Shut up, you buttwadding fart-knockers! You're all total buttmunching, fart blossoms. Suck it!!" Very good.
rosephoenix19@reddit
Dope. Word. Later. Rad. Still all common in my day to day convos.
makeshift101@reddit
Endryu727@reddit
This chick speaks the way try hards spoke in the 90’s.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
lol as if we weren't all tryhards in the 90s
mershed_perderders@reddit
It was rad
steve_nice@reddit
na it was "home slice" not "home skillit"
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
we used both 🤷♂️
krillthemalll@reddit
Hella cool
Sweet-Sale-7303@reddit
I am a long Island /NYC area 90s kid and we had a lot of rap lingo coming into our language. What this video is has to be a California thing.
slappy_mcslapenstein@reddit
That's phat!
slappy_mcslapenstein@reddit
That's what's crack-a-lackin!
ManyBonus865@reddit
411!!! I haven’t thought about 411 in years. The things our children will never experience…
lnc_5103@reddit
I've never heard anyone say heck of tight.
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
it's a kid-friendly form of "hella"
RectalBloodbath@reddit
This feels like someone saying new words they’ve only read in a book
Dog_Baseball@reddit
NOT
herseyhawkins33@reddit
Nah "bro" is OG. I hear bra/bruh interchangeably by Gen Z.
PokerbushPA@reddit
I love that the whitest white woman is teaching kids to say "home slice" and "G".
Maybe the Earth is healing? Or maybe we're in The Upside-down and nothing makes sense anymore.
karabeckian@reddit
What are the modern equivalents of home slice and G?
I quit rap when New Orleans showed up...
PokerbushPA@reddit
Not a clue. I haven't been hip with the cool kids in decades.
i-hoatzin@reddit
Hell yeah!
Reclaiming this world, one fucking gritty lesson at a time; so it makes sense again.
mykymyk@reddit
We need scholars like her to retain the integrity of our culture before it disappears and is lost forever.
ziggzer0@reddit
This is why kids come home with 9 hours of homework per class. Teach the lessons. Let kids be kids.
Crusader1865@reddit
nzungu69@reddit (OP)
Odd_Alastor_13@reddit
Jfc nostalgia…
Jupiter68128@reddit
That’s tight yo
buppiejc@reddit
Eh. I always said Bruh with a hard UH for emphasis. The rest I agree with.
External-Flight-4680@reddit
Spelled correctly!
nisamun@reddit