• @[email protected]
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    3096 days ago

    Washed? Is this some hip new slang term?

    I feel liked not knowing this one makes me, well, washed…

        • @[email protected]
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          55 days ago

          yeah I don’t even joke about hurting my knees.
          People will laugh when someone gets kicked in the balls, but seeing someone fall onto their knees is all pain and no schadenfreude.

      • @[email protected]
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        1446 days ago

        The term washed up originated in the early 2020s and gained popularity in 2021.

        As an old head, I’m pretty confident that “washed up” was used long before 2020.

              • @[email protected]
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                2 days ago

                We used to use spent when we were too lazy to say washed up. Or fucked.

                But you can’t use 4 letter words or your social media will get de-emphasized and your referral traffic will be washed fucked.

              • @[email protected]
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                56 days ago

                Ah yes I got this. Bro over here in the kitchen checks notes cooking! Wait no, he’s cooked? Cooked what? And who’s going to do the dishes? People have no respect these days, back when I was a kid you wouldn…

                • @[email protected]
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                  156 days ago

                  Based actually comes from freebased. Which is what you do to cocaine to make it crack.

                  Based used to mean something cringe worthy until the rapper Lil B started using it in a positive context.

                  Now it’s sort of the opposite of cringe.

                  • kadup
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                    76 days ago

                    Here’s a fun little curiosity that profoundly annoys me: here in Brazil “cringe” accidentally got the wrong meaning. It was being heavily used online, so a famous TV news program decided to “explain what it means” to the older generation and accidentally explained it as “cringe means everything older generations are or do” so in other words, a lot of brazilians that aren’t used to internet slang believe “cringe” means “somebody over 30” rather than actual cringe.

        • @[email protected]
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          226 days ago

          Washed up has been in use for a long time. I have no idea how they decided it was a 2020 invention. Some AI search probably told them so.

    • pruwyben
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      436 days ago

      There was a joke about it in 30 Rock, where a teenager tells Liz her boyfriend is “totally washed” and she’s like, “typical”, while secretly looking up the word on the in-show equivalent of Urban Dictionary.

      • Subverb
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        416 days ago

        Why do we need to shorten a two syllable word?

        My knees hurt.

        • @Squirrelanna
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          35 days ago

          We don’t need to. But we do it anyway for ease of language flow. See: Every single contraction, some of which don’t even reduce syllables. Just contacted to make the tongue say it faster.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 days ago

          just wait until you hear about people saying “comp sci” or worse, “poli sci”. if you are so pressed for time that you can’t afford to say all the syllables in “computer science” you can use an acronym. i will still be upset about the acronym, but i can live with it

          • @[email protected]
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            66 days ago

            I’m so old I remember a time when sci-fi fans were offended by the term “sci-fi”, preferring “SF”.

            • @[email protected]
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              76 days ago

              I remember a huge rumbling when the Sci-fi channel changed its name to SyFy. Neither word even has Y’s!!

              I’m gonna go sit on the bench with the other’s while I rub my knees.

          • Ziglin (they/them)
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            36 days ago

            Those examples are abbreviations, not acronyms. Acronyms use initial letters (though people have gotten lazy with that to get nice sounding acronyms), whereas abbreviations are a category containing shortened words and also acronyms.

            I would also like to note that the ‘poli’ in ‘poli sci’ is way too close to the prefix ‘poly’ to not cause confusion. This is just one example of an abbreviation causing confusion among those not yet aware of the meaning. That’s why when addressing a general audience I avoid them or in longer conversations introduce them first.

            • @[email protected]
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              26 days ago

              my point is that people should use acronyms instead of those abbreviations. e.g., “CS” instead of “comp sci”. i hate those abbreviations. and you’re right that the “poli” does cause confusion. it always takes me a second to figure out what people mean when they say it. i think we’re on the same side here.

              • Subverb
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                25 days ago

                Since we’re down the pedantry rabbit hole, “CS” is an initialism, not an acronym.

                • @[email protected]
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                  15 days ago

                  i can’t believe that i didn’t even know the difference until now. i hope i don’t lose my pedant card because of this