Slang of the 1920s

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  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 10 тис.

  • @robertsides3626
    @robertsides3626 3 роки тому +8682

    I swear, the internet made slang culture speed up exponentially. We go through a decades worth in about 3 months.

    • @1D991
      @1D991 2 роки тому +337

      Facts. "Dough" was in common use until the 2000s. I'm considered an "Elder millennial" and "dough" was always slang for money. Ritzy was also common, as were a few others (and even if uncommon, I grew up knowing the meaning of all of these terms)

    • @starllama2149
      @starllama2149 2 роки тому +49

      @@1D991 Damn I forgot about "dough"

    • @meesegomoo1836
      @meesegomoo1836 2 роки тому +73

      @@1D991 I knew pretty much all of these, I'm only 21.
      But where I grew up we also had WAY older (early modern English) speaking habits. Real fringe religious part of the ozarks.

    • @clicheguevara5282
      @clicheguevara5282 2 роки тому +141

      I've noticed that a lot of relatively current slang is stuff I heard growing up in the hood back in the 90s.
      Stuff like bet, dope, cap, lit, strapped, thicc, etc

    • @rjmurphyo0
      @rjmurphyo0 2 роки тому +4

      @@1D991 yeah but even in the 2000s it was uncommon for someone to say dough.

  • @ronycamacho7132
    @ronycamacho7132 3 роки тому +39053

    From dough(1920) to bread(2020) it only took a hundred years to rise.

  • @maillardsbearcat
    @maillardsbearcat 3 роки тому +16563

    I just realized, we ARE in the 20s. When I'm old, I'm gonna be like "remember the 20s?"

    • @Roachiscomingforyou
      @Roachiscomingforyou 3 роки тому +773

      OH SHIT YEAH

    • @hatersgotohell627
      @hatersgotohell627 3 роки тому +628

      Except our era is gay af.

    • @fabiomino3506
      @fabiomino3506 3 роки тому +63

      @HN 😂

    • @lizaanual9166
      @lizaanual9166 3 роки тому +360

      Nah, the 1920s was gay af too.. It has never left.

    • @hatersgotohell627
      @hatersgotohell627 3 роки тому +670

      @@lizaanual9166 we literally have a society that thinks men can identify as women and enter women's bathrooms and compete in girls sports. not to mention being gay is taught to kids like its something to aspire to. Most males unlike the 1920s are beta or feminine.

  • @TheQuantumWave
    @TheQuantumWave Рік тому +902

    My father was born in 1926. I heard the slang of the 30's and 40's throughout my entire childhood.

    • @tvaddict6623
      @tvaddict6623 Рік тому +29

      Me too- my mom was born 1920 and my dad 1927

    • @teritrujillo6042
      @teritrujillo6042 Рік тому +5

      Lol me too.

    • @CaryCotterman
      @CaryCotterman Рік тому +38

      Me too! Dad: 1925, Mom: 1926. I also got a good dose of 1890s-1910s slang from my grandmother, born 1891. I still use some of these expressions, just for fun.

    • @MortusSweet
      @MortusSweet Рік тому +8

      I’ve grown up watching movies and shows from the 40-50’s, so that’s where I slang comes from 😂 people think it’s rather silly but I like me 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @brandonespinoza9279
      @brandonespinoza9279 Рік тому +1

      Same, only it’s my maternal grandfather (mom’s dad), born on February 9, that year!

  • @sudonim7552
    @sudonim7552 3 роки тому +13644

    In 2120 there will be a video like this discussing the meanings of "bruh", "lit", "yeet", "boof", and so on.

    • @Qrayon
      @Qrayon 3 роки тому +365

      What do "yeet" and "bouf" mean?

    • @Qrayon
      @Qrayon 3 роки тому +1166

      @@Ajz092 I guess we'll have to wait until 2120.

    • @sudonim7552
      @sudonim7552 3 роки тому +632

      @@Qrayon "Yeet" can be used as a verb meaning "throw", or simply as an expression you say while throwing something. "Boof", as of right now, means a joint, as in "pass me the boof", although it's definitely not limited to that definition. What "boof" means can completely depend on the context you are using it in.

    • @Qrayon
      @Qrayon 3 роки тому +59

      @@sudonim7552 Thank you.

    • @freefinancialadvice
      @freefinancialadvice 3 роки тому +176

      BOOF means to administer drugs through your rectum. Look it up if u don’t believe me.

  • @--enyo--
    @--enyo-- 3 роки тому +3018

    I’m surprised how many are still in reasonably common usage.

    • @hojo70
      @hojo70 3 роки тому +285

      And how!

    • @donnybrook8824
      @donnybrook8824 3 роки тому +17

      @@hojo70 Get out more and meet some friends, talk to strangers. Do something with your life.

    • @barbarak2836
      @barbarak2836 3 роки тому +281

      @@donnybrook8824 Are you having a bad day, and it makes you feel better to take it out on others?

    • @donnybrook8824
      @donnybrook8824 3 роки тому +45

      @@barbarak2836 90% of these words are still common. Education must be dead.

    • @donnybrook8824
      @donnybrook8824 3 роки тому +5

      @J And how?

  • @ussvincent1119
    @ussvincent1119 3 роки тому +2542

    People in the 20’s: Begone *V A M P*

    • @clarkclaps4547
      @clarkclaps4547 3 роки тому +82

      vamp anthem vamp anthem vamp anthem vamp anthem

    • @purplegurl79
      @purplegurl79 3 роки тому +7

      Let Bygones be bygones! I always say that!

    • @caycayy
      @caycayy 3 роки тому +15

      @@clarkclaps4547 sometimes you can see the replies before seeing the replies

    • @Golabkiwsosiepomidorowym
      @Golabkiwsosiepomidorowym 3 роки тому +15

      Please bring back VAMP

    • @whiteknight1479
      @whiteknight1479 3 роки тому +11

      Sounds like a better word. Vamp. Ha

  • @LZEGION
    @LZEGION Рік тому +716

    I do love how slang evolves, and I particularly love how much slang actually carries over to today.

    • @xavierharvey4961
      @xavierharvey4961 Рік тому +36

      It's interesting that we are living in our own 20s.. kinda cool really🤣

    • @CaryCotterman
      @CaryCotterman Рік тому

      "cool" being a good example.@@xavierharvey4961

    • @kea1234
      @kea1234 Рік тому +14

      Me too. I try to tell my boomer coworkers(some are younger than you'd think) that language evolves and what you identify with pissed the old generation off and now you're old. They don't get it.

    • @againstthepods4316
      @againstthepods4316 Рік тому +1

      i wonder what all the people in these pictures are up to i would love to meet them they probably have so many stories now from that time.

    • @cateatfood6634
      @cateatfood6634 11 місяців тому +1

      What is even more cool is idioms. Almost all of which came from the Bible....

  • @vsretro7061
    @vsretro7061 3 роки тому +3099

    Thank you, I’ll be needing this when I time travel

  • @Tofilux
    @Tofilux 3 роки тому +9402

    Fun Fact: "Slang" is a slang word for Shortened Language 😉

  • @Trentsum
    @Trentsum 3 роки тому +2641

    I spent dough getting this tomato fried. We were about to make whoopi until a wet blanket dampened the mood.

    • @DantheToonMan
      @DantheToonMan 3 роки тому +227

      I’m just going to pretend I don’t know what you mean.

    • @vilefly
      @vilefly 3 роки тому +196

      She was IT, wasn't she? But then that ragamuffin just had to go and pull out his heater on ya. He was all wet because that was his wife, see? Good thing Mugsey showed up and bounced him up on out of there. Don't worry about it. CHECKERS! THE COPS! RUN!

    • @SteveFrenchWoodNStuff
      @SteveFrenchWoodNStuff 3 роки тому +14

      Robert James Johnson and Emma Harris weren't just making love: they were making Whoopi!
      (Look the names up if you don't get it.)

    • @shibolinemress8913
      @shibolinemress8913 3 роки тому +5

      @@SteveFrenchWoodNStuff I see what you did there! 🖖😊

    • @jsoulas
      @jsoulas 3 роки тому +7

      She was the bee’s knees, eh?

  • @JeyFlash
    @JeyFlash Рік тому +160

    At least half of these have heavily lasted through the times..as an early 90’s baby, only a few of these I hadn’t heard growing up with my grandmothers 😀

    • @caittails
      @caittails 9 місяців тому +8

      Same age, and I hear them all the time from people even younger than me. 😂

  • @nandocordeiro5853
    @nandocordeiro5853 3 роки тому +1630

    1920: In the future, we'll have flying cars!
    2021: Let's bring back 1920's slang!

    • @MintleafCakes
      @MintleafCakes 3 роки тому +14

      well, this was published in 2020, but i get your joke

    • @shiruki8974
      @shiruki8974 3 роки тому +10

      We have made a flying car already

    • @pscoolguy
      @pscoolguy 3 роки тому +7

      Pretty much all of the, "1920'sslang," is used today.

    • @JacksContent
      @JacksContent 3 роки тому

      @@shiruki8974 Yeah There Is One In Slovakia I Believe. It Is A Small Aircraft That When On The Ground Transforms Into A Car

    • @MimicMimicMimic
      @MimicMimicMimic 3 роки тому +1

      We actually have a flying car, they are still in testing though. Lol

  • @JoshMaxPower
    @JoshMaxPower 2 роки тому +3051

    My mother, who died at 94 in 2018, was fond of the word "pill" meaning someone who was a dud or not very lively, at party or such. "She's a real pill, that one!" Thanks for a great video! I knew every one of the phrases!

    • @pamelatapia5595
      @pamelatapia5595 2 роки тому +88

      My mom was the same age group as yours, and always called me a "pill" when I was being overly active and talkative.

    • @lynn6221
      @lynn6221 2 роки тому +27

      Mom used to say that too. And another was - I've got more aches and pains then a bottle of Carters pills. Lol

    • @jameswilliams3241
      @jameswilliams3241 2 роки тому +23

      My mom used the same term she'll be 93 in September. My grandparents and my parents used many of these terms so I'm familiar with the terms, my mom always referred to us as a bunch of ragamuffins and sometimes as crumbsnatchers

    • @Seattleseeker
      @Seattleseeker 2 роки тому +49

      A pill is someone who is hard to take. A card on the other hand would be someone fun to play along with.

    • @kenbranaugh8251
      @kenbranaugh8251 2 роки тому +15

      That poor sap" my dad would say

  • @thumbstruck
    @thumbstruck 3 роки тому +795

    Another "dough" reference - "doe" for deerskin, common currency in frontier America, "buck" = a buckskin = $1.

    • @jonnyOysters
      @jonnyOysters 3 роки тому +44

      @GODWIN VINCENT GEVICE Moe I didn't.... I mean I knew about bucks meaning money but I didn't know the origin of it

    • @IONLYKNOWMOVESTHATKILLPEOPLE
      @IONLYKNOWMOVESTHATKILLPEOPLE 3 роки тому +26

      @GODWIN VINCENT GEVICE Moe neither did I dickbag

    • @GameStationDreamBox
      @GameStationDreamBox 3 роки тому +12

      @GODWIN VINCENT GEVICE Moe yeah, me either dumbass

    • @SonofSethoitae
      @SonofSethoitae 3 роки тому +7

      "Dough" is actually dough though. It's related to the older slang term "bread," which itself comes from the Cockney Rhyming Slang "bread and honey" for money

    • @huitlang931
      @huitlang931 3 роки тому +1

      A buck can actually be $1 to 1,000,000 or more depending on context.

  • @bubz3t136
    @bubz3t136 Рік тому +66

    The word vamp has had two other meanings over the years. Jazz musicians used it to mean "A short, simple introductory passage", and graffiti artists in '80s New York used to use it to mean mugging someone. There was even a graffiti crew who called themselves The Vamp Squad.

    • @kosovo6280
      @kosovo6280 Рік тому +7

      🧛🏿 carti

    • @biskit8050
      @biskit8050 Рік тому

      @@kosovo6280 SLATT

    • @xxxod
      @xxxod Рік тому

      ​@@kosovo6280 SGP is og vamp

    • @LuckyCharms777
      @LuckyCharms777 Рік тому

      I can see that. Mugging someone isn’t too dissimilar from a vampire sucking someone’s blood. Money being the lifeblood for our survival.

    • @ima8533
      @ima8533 Рік тому +4

      @@LuckyCharms777that’s not what it means
      Vamp vamp life or vampin is just a person who up at night and sleeps in the day just like a vampire
      Nightlife people

  • @bhans234
    @bhans234 3 роки тому +643

    In germany the translation of "and how" is commonly used today. "Und wie"

    • @greedokenobi3855
      @greedokenobi3855 3 роки тому +36

      Same in the Netherlands, we use it a lot! En hoe!

    • @fenn_fren
      @fenn_fren 3 роки тому +32

      Also in Czechia. "A jak!" is still commonly used even today.

    • @xZandrem
      @xZandrem 3 роки тому +23

      Same in Italy, we use it as a common response, we say "Eccome" (which is an attached version of the two words "E" and "come" translated in english as "And" & "How")
      Maybe the american slang word came from our europeans common saying during the great immigrations of our ancestors

    • @defendrr_ru
      @defendrr_ru 3 роки тому +12

      Can confirm, the word is used in Russia too, although rarely.

    • @lyingeyes5579
      @lyingeyes5579 3 роки тому +10

      Same in Afrikaans too👀 En hoe nou!

  • @julienielsen3746
    @julienielsen3746 3 роки тому +443

    I have a high school yearbook from the 1930s. The word "swell" was used a lot in the things kids wrote in the yearbook. I guess that was used in the 1920s too.

    • @thetooginator153
      @thetooginator153 3 роки тому +58

      I saw my dad’s early-fifties high school yearbook, and almost everyone wrote: “To a swell guy...”
      These days, it seems like “swell” is mostly used a bit sarcastically, as in “I spilled coffee on my shirt! Isn’t that just swell?”

    • @AAM29290
      @AAM29290 3 роки тому +7

      @@thetooginator153 I use swell all the time instead of saying it went “so well”

    • @thetooginator153
      @thetooginator153 3 роки тому +22

      @@AAM29290 - I tried to find the origin of “swell” and I couldn’t find anything, but I bet it comes from “so well” as you said. I think it’s a fun word, and I’m glad you are helping keeping it alive.
      I’m sixty, and I remember adults using the word “swell” to mean “good” when I was a boy. I think “swell” started to be replaced with other words (in California at least) in the late sixties. Words for “good” change with every new generation because kids like to have their own vocabulary that is different from adults. When I was in high school, one word for “good” was “gnarly”, which was immortalized in the movie “Fast Times at Ridgemont High”.
      I bet the word “swell” (as an adjective) is VERY old, so, I bet that it has had many periods of heavy usage over the centuries, and I bet it will become common again.

    • @lordfenix17
      @lordfenix17 3 роки тому +8

      Well isn't that swell?

    • @vibaj16
      @vibaj16 3 роки тому +6

      TheTooginator I feel like these days “swell” is seen as fancy/old way of saying good, like if it was from Shakespeare’s time

  • @soarornor
    @soarornor 3 роки тому +679

    My Grandfather Henry used to say “.....since Christ lost his shoes in the Sinai Desert.....” to denote a long passage of time. As in: “I haven’t seen that guy since Christ lost his shoes in the Sinai Desert.” My sister and I still use that phrase and laugh every time. He had a lot of great bits. He was born in 1890.

    • @ferdelance6801
      @ferdelance6801 3 роки тому +17

      Since king hatchet was a young boy! Have you heard of this one?

    • @soarornor
      @soarornor 3 роки тому +17

      @@ferdelance6801 Never heard it but that’s a great one.

    • @joemacdonnagh6750
      @joemacdonnagh6750 3 роки тому +5

      Since day dot.

    • @generalpatzer6893
      @generalpatzer6893 3 роки тому +12

      Since Christ was a cowboy...lol

    • @lubertdass1444
      @lubertdass1444 3 роки тому +23

      I always loved “As old as Methuselahs mother” and “ I don’t know him from Adams house cat”

  • @evilblack2416
    @evilblack2416 Рік тому +11

    As a hepster it's cool to see the younger generation latch on to the older jive.
    Just *one* thing i've gotta blow steam on: Louis Armstrong was born in the Battlefield in New Orleans, French Creole country, so you don't pronounce the S in his name. Say it like "Louie" if you want to be solid.

  • @nephetula
    @nephetula 3 роки тому +485

    A few more I remember:
    Being drunk was "sauced"
    No was "nix"
    Stopping something was "putting the kibosh on it"
    A pistol was a "rod" or "heater"
    A hairpiece was "rug"
    A hat was a "lid"
    A boxer was a "palooka"
    Women were "dames"
    Getting killed was "iced"
    Gangsters were "heavies"
    Dice were "bones"
    A bag was a "poke"
    Keep quiet was "put a lid on it" or "zip it"
    A machine gun was a "Tommy gun" or a "typewriter"
    Running from the law was "on the lam"
    Money was "moolah"
    A lawyer was a "mouthpiece"

    • @melissacooper4282
      @melissacooper4282 3 роки тому +33

      I know lots of slang terms for money. Dough, loot, bread, moolah, and cash.

    • @allisgrace1313
      @allisgrace1313 3 роки тому +31

      My grandparents were born in 1915 and 1916 and sauced was definitely the word they used for being drunk!

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 3 роки тому +19

      "Poke" (bag) isn't really slang as such. It's the anglicized spelling of the French word "poque" - which means the same thing. A small poque (informally "poquette") is where we get the word "pocket."
      On the other hand, some think that the slang (now accepted in common speech) word "poach" came from this same term - since a thief or unlawful hunter would conceal their goods in a poke, to avoid casual notice.

    • @michaelshultz2540
      @michaelshultz2540 3 роки тому +6

      @@melissacooper4282 clams,whampum, lettuce,scratch,show cards,etc...

    • @janealexander1378
      @janealexander1378 3 роки тому +3

      Drunk; "you could get paralyzed for 15 cents" -Ethyl Waters, 'The New Jump Steady Ball' 1929

  • @nbgilbert
    @nbgilbert 3 роки тому +390

    I grew up with this vintage slang. I recognize all of it. My grandmother used it, my parents used it and I’ve used it. I’m 65 years old.

    • @sweetnsour3693
      @sweetnsour3693 3 роки тому +14

      Have you passed on the slang to your kids?

    • @superchitownhustler
      @superchitownhustler 3 роки тому +11

      That's swell!

    • @jaylyn1471
      @jaylyn1471 3 роки тому +4

      Awesome

    • @bflogal18
      @bflogal18 2 роки тому +6

      I’m 62 and I recognize a lot of this slang. “And how” is a term I heard my parents say many times and I picked it up as a kid.

    • @texasred2702
      @texasred2702 2 роки тому

      @@jaylyn1471 I totally see what you did there.

  • @smallstudiodesign
    @smallstudiodesign 3 роки тому +544

    My mum was born in 1924 ... she died in January 2021. She was a treasure trove of memories from by gone times & experiences. ✨💖✨

    • @mikebeesley3150
      @mikebeesley3150 3 роки тому +33

      My mom was 92 when she passed away, she was funny, when someone rang the doorbell she would say "who DAT" and when she and when she picked up the phone she said "who dis" it was great.

    • @texasballunofficial
      @texasballunofficial 3 роки тому +1

      @@jokesrcool3737 r.I.p

    • @ShellShock11C
      @ShellShock11C 3 роки тому +2

      Life well lived.

    • @ShellShock11C
      @ShellShock11C 3 роки тому +16

      @@ccox7198 Really dude? Like...REALLY? Gtfo.

    • @descartesdonkey4291
      @descartesdonkey4291 3 роки тому +1

      has she kicked the bucket?

  • @jamesslick4790
    @jamesslick4790 2 роки тому +825

    "Dough" and "Bread" were still common slang in the 1970s. I was born in 1962, and I spent my share of dough trying to make bread.

    • @realeyesrealiserealliesful2957
      @realeyesrealiserealliesful2957 2 роки тому +51

      I used the word dough today

    • @zabariduwab9950
      @zabariduwab9950 2 роки тому +22

      I use bread all day everyday

    • @pantherman8719
      @pantherman8719 2 роки тому +4

      I got some throw-away bread.

    • @guywhousesapseudonymonyout4272
      @guywhousesapseudonymonyout4272 2 роки тому +13

      I was boirn in 1970, and I'm pretty sure they are both used. I mean, maybe they are dated, but would a kid today need a UA-cam video to actually explain it?

    • @press_here__8697
      @press_here__8697 2 роки тому +15

      Yeah, they’re both still common today. I’d say bread is more popular than dough, but I’ve still used and heard both at least once or twice this month

  • @newbells1337
    @newbells1337 3 роки тому +486

    What I wouldn't give for Art Deco to make a comeback.

    • @BadWebDiver
      @BadWebDiver 3 роки тому +16

      Same.

    • @deechonada
      @deechonada 3 роки тому +1

      too much?

    • @elgatofelix8917
      @elgatofelix8917 3 роки тому +2

      What I wouldn't give for this channel's lame videos to stop appearing in my recommended

    • @trippybruh1592
      @trippybruh1592 3 роки тому +12

      Especially the architecture and interior design. One of my favorite places in the world is the Little America hotel in SLC. As soon as you walk in it's like stepping back in time and it's so warm and comfortable even during the rough winter months.

    • @iaoshua
      @iaoshua 3 роки тому +5

      its back

  • @RoccoKergo
    @RoccoKergo 2 роки тому +2166

    Dough 1:16
    Vamp 1:49
    Sheik 2:30
    And how! 3:34
    Putting on the ritz 4:13
    Ragamuffin 4:58
    Tomato 5:39
    Wet Blanket 6:18
    Whoopie 6:58
    Fried 7:40
    Bump off 8:20
    Cheaters 8:55
    Hot 9:19
    Hock 10:04
    Petting Party 10:48
    Bob 11:29
    Heebie Jeebies 12:20
    Thanks for watching! 14:09
    I just needed to make a list to quickly pull these out whenever lol

    • @waferae
      @waferae 2 роки тому +12

      thanks

    • @StrawbearXD
      @StrawbearXD 2 роки тому +13

      Forgot it

    • @LazyGavid
      @LazyGavid 2 роки тому +6

      @@StrawbearXD forgot what?

    • @StrawbearXD
      @StrawbearXD 2 роки тому +8

      @@LazyGavid the word it

    • @LazyGavid
      @LazyGavid 2 роки тому +7

      @@StrawbearXD the word what?

  • @patrickwolf5796
    @patrickwolf5796 Рік тому +57

    Linguistics is a fascinating topic. So many of these slang terms still exist today, but have slightly or totally different meanings. This was very Hot and 23 scaddoll.

  • @kimballwhittington2463
    @kimballwhittington2463 2 роки тому +1613

    My grandmother had a two part brooch from the 20s. It was a silver piece that said GEE and a tiny chain connected to another piece that said WIZZ. I asked her where she got it. She said it was on a dress she bought in the 1930s. In hard times they would put free jewelry on dresses to make them more attractive. I HAVE THIS BROOCH TO THIS DAY. And still think about what a new and fresh flapper phrase it once was. AW GEE WIZZ!!!

    • @HOLLASOUNDS
      @HOLLASOUNDS 2 роки тому

      Got to make that dough, Shes a bit of a Vamp and will suck you dry, Dressing like the Rits, Hes a bit of a ragamuffin, She is a Hot tomato, He is a bit of a wet blanket, selling hot goods, Giving Me Heebie Geebies, Shes definitely got IT, these are all thinks someone from England in there 30s will still say today.

    • @-.__328
      @-.__328 2 роки тому +17

      @Brendon Lacroix humans are both fantastic and terrible at the same time

    • @gregtavarez3322
      @gregtavarez3322 2 роки тому +24

      @@-.__328 thats what makes us truly unique. We are capable of creation and destruction unlike any other creature on this planet . But don’t focus on the bad cus theres ALOT of it . Focus on the good of humanity cus thats what true humanity is , helping others and creating a community for all.

    • @dylanmonstrum1538
      @dylanmonstrum1538 2 роки тому +6

      Damn man, thats really awesome actually

    • @hardcase7753
      @hardcase7753 2 роки тому +7

      that sounds like an epic brooch

  • @limbo8359
    @limbo8359 3 роки тому +3959

    1920s slang: "You put on quite the ritz my old chap!"
    2020s slang: "Why you actin amogus sussy baka poggers bruh"

    • @rowenkylee5627
      @rowenkylee5627 3 роки тому +566

      Anyone talking like the 2020s need an exorcist.

    • @boozeyoozey7248
      @boozeyoozey7248 3 роки тому +129

      I don't know about 'sussy' but I know that 'amongus' is just a funny word some people use, 'baka' is a japanese word for 'idiot' or 'dumb' it also died off in 2018 or 2019 because I can't find anyone who uses it unironically today, 'poggers' is a word for 'very good' and it became popular with the twitch streamer Tommyinnit.

    • @robintst
      @robintst 3 роки тому +184

      Slang has never been worse than right now.

    • @ss6truks
      @ss6truks 3 роки тому +85

      No. Nobody says that

    • @bruce_sat4n66
      @bruce_sat4n66 3 роки тому +21

      @@robintst nah, i don't think so

  • @lucywucyyy
    @lucywucyyy 3 роки тому +146

    its funny how some slang has stuck around for 100 years

    • @adrinathegreat3095
      @adrinathegreat3095 3 роки тому +9

      Half the four letter slang words used today are 18th and 19th century

    • @apathyguy8338
      @apathyguy8338 3 роки тому +3

      Not really. language evolves. If you could travel back 500 years you'd likely only understand about half the words people spoke. People would think your an ignoramus. Well more people would.

    • @selfishstockton6123
      @selfishstockton6123 3 роки тому +5

      @@apathyguy8338 but the 18th and 19th centuries weren’t 500 years ago 🙄

    • @apathyguy8338
      @apathyguy8338 3 роки тому +3

      @@selfishstockton6123 You are correct. My point was today's slang is in tomorrow's dictionary. I don't believe that point is off topic here.

    • @JudgeJulieLit
      @JudgeJulieLit 3 роки тому

      ... to 200.

  • @randomthoughtstoday
    @randomthoughtstoday 9 місяців тому +29

    Funny how 100 years later or so, the 1920's slang words still outperform the 2020's.

  • @lynnpehrson8826
    @lynnpehrson8826 3 роки тому +220

    People still say "dough", and to a much lesser extent "and how"

    • @liamroberts9047
      @liamroberts9047 3 роки тому +1

      Hello Lynn, How are you doing?

    • @rowenkylee5627
      @rowenkylee5627 3 роки тому +15

      I've never heard "and how" being used.

    • @lynnpehrson8826
      @lynnpehrson8826 3 роки тому +9

      @@rowenkylee5627 it wouldn't be a normal thing to say, but someone may say it in a sarcastic or comedic context

    • @mollieisabellereynolds
      @mollieisabellereynolds 3 роки тому +10

      my mum used to call me a ragamuffin when my hair was tangled as a little kid. she was born in 1973.

    • @PhxVanguard
      @PhxVanguard 3 роки тому +3

      i say, "and how". lol

  • @Adam-xf6sq
    @Adam-xf6sq 3 роки тому +4524

    Old Karen: Back in my day we didn’t have slang.
    1920’s teenager: ok wet blanket
    Edit: this comment is a joke, it funny. Stop trying to disprove my claim because there isn’t any.

    • @Hamptino
      @Hamptino 3 роки тому +132

      She probably went to petting parties

    • @dabdella1460
      @dabdella1460 3 роки тому +29

      @@Hamptino 😅😅😅 yeah a zoo

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 3 роки тому +13

      The 200000000 year old karen

    • @MichaelJ44
      @MichaelJ44 3 роки тому +1

      Source?

    • @MichaelJ44
      @MichaelJ44 3 роки тому +1

      Exactly 🤦‍♂️

  • @areyoutheregoditsmedave
    @areyoutheregoditsmedave 3 роки тому +2894

    “A young adult male”
    Otherwise known as a young man

  • @raizab.1837
    @raizab.1837 Рік тому +2

    Why do the early 1900's fascinate me so much? 1900 to the late 1930's....

    • @raizab.1837
      @raizab.1837 Рік тому

      @@canskasapaemanon708 Maybe not this song so much but that era... Were we there or in some strange way tied to it? That time does pull me. One of life's mysteries... Take care friend...

  • @over-educated-sp
    @over-educated-sp 3 роки тому +436

    “If you don’t know where to go to, why don’t you go where fashion sits. Putting on the Ritz.”

    • @chelebelle2223
      @chelebelle2223 3 роки тому

      😁

    • @keithjohnston5936
      @keithjohnston5936 3 роки тому +16

      PUDDI’ ONNA REE! Young Frankenstein! The cheesy top 40 hit by Taco ruined it.

    • @nonameman9291
      @nonameman9291 3 роки тому +2

      Wow, way to fuck up the lyrics.

    • @over-educated-sp
      @over-educated-sp 3 роки тому +9

      @@nonameman9291 settle down there cool music nerd. You’re obviously old enough to know the song, yet have the temperament of a basement dwelling duche bag. I was only like 13 when the 80’s remake of this song came out. I was definitely not listening to raído friendly shit, I.e. this song. I simply wrote the first thing closest to this, I remembered at 12-15 years old. You are everything you hate about yourself when you glance at yourself in your mirror. Now go have mommy make you some Mac & cheese. FYI, I’m a history professor, and the 20’s are not my emphasis. You internet nerd.

    • @Docneg
      @Docneg 3 роки тому +1

      @@over-educated-sp Ha! The professor also misspells "radio", "douche", and "Internet". Over-educated, indeed.

  • @samgalloway3012
    @samgalloway3012 3 роки тому +72

    anyone else expected footage with audio of the slang? but then you realize its from the 20's and theres rarely any footage with audio...

  • @grumpyoldwizard
    @grumpyoldwizard 3 роки тому +1628

    Man, you made me feel old. I am 62 and was raised by my Grandparents, so I heard a lot of these words in use.

    • @gamesgames2389
      @gamesgames2389 3 роки тому +34

      @Average Joe I hope you didn't hear the word woopie ever being used XD

    • @joejones8454
      @joejones8454 3 роки тому +33

      your profile picture makes me happy

    • @mr.hotpockets3425
      @mr.hotpockets3425 3 роки тому +5

      Damn

    • @Catsface99
      @Catsface99 3 роки тому +35

      I am 63 and my PARENTS said those things and so do I and many of my friends. My parents were born in the 1930s.

    • @irlredline7965
      @irlredline7965 3 роки тому +16

      Noice you're 62 and you have Spawn as your profile pic it's nice seeing the older generation with stuff like that

  • @BeIlG
    @BeIlG Рік тому +8

    I LOVE you trying to decipher TRUE slang of the day vs what has become more desirable. It can come off as more making fun of an era. Thank you! this feels like true historian work.

    • @againstthepods4316
      @againstthepods4316 Рік тому

      i wonder what all the people in these pictures are up to i would love to meet them they probably have so many stories now from that time.

  • @joadarium9605
    @joadarium9605 3 роки тому +210

    So even in the 1920's people described parties as "fire" and "lit"

    • @VndNvwYvvSvv
      @VndNvwYvvSvv 3 роки тому +27

      But cool and hot can mean the same thing.

    • @lets-getbrandon4192
      @lets-getbrandon4192 3 роки тому +21

      @@VndNvwYvvSvv now you’re on the trolley

    • @skyblaze1134
      @skyblaze1134 3 роки тому +10

      Yes this generation didnt make up anything new lot of slang is older than you may think.

    • @ferencmarcellpalyi220
      @ferencmarcellpalyi220 3 роки тому +3

      @@VndNvwYvvSvv yep, it's up to you which one you use. Also, it's down to you which one you use.

    • @robintst
      @robintst 3 роки тому +2

      "Lit" lasted a few decades back then but it meant being drunk.

  • @GreyWolfLeaderTW
    @GreyWolfLeaderTW 3 роки тому +1425

    The 1920s was the era the slang "cool" came into use as well, specifically because of Calvin Cooliage, the 30th American president. Because Calvin was unflappable, aloof, strict, sharp, and stayed out of the political mud, the first part of his last name became a shorthand to refer to someone as steady, smooth, sly, and fashionable.

    • @breastfeeder4856
      @breastfeeder4856 3 роки тому +117

      Thats a very cool fact

    • @robintst
      @robintst 3 роки тому +57

      Cool . . . beans.

    • @nytrodioxide
      @nytrodioxide 3 роки тому +29

      Yo that's cool

    • @kap369
      @kap369 3 роки тому +35

      I think the Jazz crowd started cool and hip. Makes more sense to me, but I wasn’t there.

    • @literallyunderrated
      @literallyunderrated 3 роки тому +11

      No… and at least spell his name right

  • @AlgaeEater09
    @AlgaeEater09 3 роки тому +778

    1920 - “let’s get this dough”
    2020 - “let’s get this bread”

    • @Ysumbruh0
      @Ysumbruh0 3 роки тому +146

      1020: *lets get this yeast*

    • @evie402
      @evie402 3 роки тому +63

      In a few years it's gonna be toast

    • @Ihavepinkeye
      @Ihavepinkeye 3 роки тому +13

      @@evie402 or sandwich

    • @davej4476
      @davej4476 3 роки тому +13

      We got baked

    • @Tech-vd7qs
      @Tech-vd7qs 3 роки тому +13

      Lets get this starch

  • @rwarren58
    @rwarren58 10 місяців тому +11

    It’s amazing how many are still used and recognizable. Good job and how. I would add bootleg to your list. Still watching in 2023.

  • @puckpuckster3604
    @puckpuckster3604 3 роки тому +332

    Seems like most are still in use today. None were unknown.

    • @dave-yj9mc
      @dave-yj9mc 3 роки тому +23

      I didn't know "tomato"... but I've used Peach

    • @dickiegreenleaf750
      @dickiegreenleaf750 3 роки тому +10

      I agree. Not sure why he’s acting like these are foreign words. Majority of these are known and still used. Sure not a lot but heard them many times.

    • @brianmccarthy5557
      @brianmccarthy5557 3 роки тому +3

      Tomato was used in the 1990's crime drama "The Grifters" starring John Cusack, Annette Bening and Angelica Houston, based on the Jim Thompson novel. The Bening character uses it to describe herself. I've heard it rarely used in real life.
      Most of the rest of these are in common use to various degrees and I've used them myself. Petting parties was stlll around when I was a young teen in the 1970's but I haven't heard it since. Vamp is pretty unusual. Sheik is only used with respect to the condom of the same name, since we have far more experience with Islamic Arabs than they did then, mostly negative. You did give me the info to understand the title of the play and 1950's film "Come Back Little Sheba" with Burt Lancaster. I've heard Sheba used by some older black men to describe a queenly black woman, by not by younger men. "It" was generally replaced in the 1960's by "charisma" which is still used, though it's echoed in phrases like "She's got it!" and "you've either got it or you don't".

    • @dc1697
      @dc1697 3 роки тому +2

      "Keen" is an old one . "Numb skull" is another . "Wise guy" ; "clams" is one I use when dealing with money

    • @dickiegreenleaf750
      @dickiegreenleaf750 3 роки тому

      @@dc1697 numb skull lol

  • @AVClarke
    @AVClarke 3 роки тому +114

    "Wet Blanket" is still pretty common today.

    • @fraise_fraud
      @fraise_fraud 3 роки тому +3

      Are you sure

    • @sadderbythecloud
      @sadderbythecloud 3 роки тому +1

      Used alot in grappling / wrestling

    • @ethan1340
      @ethan1340 3 роки тому

      okay boomer

    • @camerons9229
      @camerons9229 2 роки тому +3

      idk why everyone is replying saying “not so much.” I have called people a wet blanket and heard it used commonly my whole life. Maybe it’s a regional thing?

    • @weirdhuman627
      @weirdhuman627 2 роки тому

      I've never heard 'Wet Blanket' before watching this video.

  • @hectormontes7056
    @hectormontes7056 2 роки тому +996

    I though the phrase “wet blanket” came from how uncomfortable a wet blanket would be, it being wet turned it from being soft comfortable and warm into something wet and cold. I just imagined a wet blanket among normal blankets, or laying in a bed and getting a wet blanket instead of a dry one. I guess I haven’t really thought about it since I was a kid.

    • @jombiejuss
      @jombiejuss 2 роки тому +33

      Or in England you could call a person “moist” meaning weak, soggy, soft. Great slang is great and sticks because they transcend many multiple implications and shows our gift of abstract communication which is exclusively the way our human species communicates

    • @trekkiejunk
      @trekkiejunk 2 роки тому +13

      “Abstract communication” is not “exclusively the way our human species communicates.” We also communicate directly with language, not just abstractly.

    • @jombiejuss
      @jombiejuss 2 роки тому +5

      Trekkie Junk language is made up of abstract clusters called words. Each word is made up of abstract symbols called letters. Context further ads to the flexibility abstraction makes of them. Like saying
      “The tree has no bark.”
      Or “the dog has no bark”

    • @sheep4483
      @sheep4483 2 роки тому +6

      ​@@trekkiejunk I think the point is that language itself is abstract, it can be used to convey concrete things but really the true power of it is that it can be used to describe anything, whether it exists concretely or not, and as concretely or abstractly as one may want. Although furthermore, I think you misinterpreted "exclusively the way our human species communicates" as it being the exclusive way we communicate, when I think he more likely meant that we, exclusively, communicate using language in such a manner, as opposed to any other species.

    • @jombiejuss
      @jombiejuss 2 роки тому

      Sheep44 Dialect also evolves slowly throughout, and the youth using their slang as apart of newer language that feels timely and like their own and adopting a updated dialect to communicate with their peers and know whose familiar. That flexibility allows for such communication breakdowns and restructures to go on. “Water needs to flow to stay fresh” ☯️👈

  • @Noxims47314
    @Noxims47314 7 місяців тому +4

    The past is a gift, linguistically speaking.

  • @jeffsummstl
    @jeffsummstl 3 роки тому +167

    “Making whoopee” was still being used on The Newlywed Game and Match Game in the ‘70s.

  • @lawrenceaglick8511
    @lawrenceaglick8511 3 роки тому +333

    My impression is that "ragamuffin" only referred to poor children, never to adults. Also, his name may have always been spelled "Louis" Armstrong but it was always pronounced "Louie".

    • @tallboy2234
      @tallboy2234 3 роки тому +11

      Rag-a-muffin is definitely a child wearing rag-like clothes. Louie is just the shortened, knick-name of the formal Louis. The city St. Louis is often called St. Louie.

    • @overlordnat
      @overlordnat 3 роки тому +14

      @@tallboy2234 It wouldn’t sound remotely formal to pronounce the name of any of the kings of France called ‘Louis’ as ‘Lewis’ when it should be ‘Loo-ee’. Louis Spence, Louis Theroux and Louis Walsh are British and Irish celebrities who are always called ‘Loo-ee’, it’s only in America where ‘Louis’ is normally pronounced ‘Lewis’ (though ‘Louis Armstrong’ is occasional called ‘Lewis’ outside of America by people who are consciously trying to pronounce his name in the way that he, himself, said it.).

    • @kenkur27
      @kenkur27 3 роки тому +7

      @@tallboy2234 'Louie' is also the original French pronunciation of the name

    • @maryerb6062
      @maryerb6062 2 роки тому +3

      That's because it's French.

    • @lornas-w4661
      @lornas-w4661 2 роки тому +5

      But when he sings he himself pronounces it Lewis.

  • @Cam-gk9ms
    @Cam-gk9ms Рік тому +4

    i will never forget my early childhood. i was born in 1995 and I had the honor and privilege of meeting people born in early 1900s and I remember like yesterday, it was 2002, meeting a woman who was born in 1902. She told me to "keep your ideas open and enjoy living in the future" because we're living in the times she wished she could have. It didn't hit me until recently when i'm in my late 20's to see what she actually meant by that.

  • @remmyx4012
    @remmyx4012 3 роки тому +740

    1920s: sheik and sheiva
    2020s: himbo and bimbo

  • @Youtubebunchabitchez
    @Youtubebunchabitchez Рік тому +13

    word "vamp" exist , carti : rEal ShHHIIIIIIIITTTt?

  • @caseyjonsson1755
    @caseyjonsson1755 Рік тому +403

    I have my great grandmothers high school year book and the best part is all the slang terms written by other students "youre the tops" and "to a fellow jitterbug" are my favs- slang through out the years is so interesting

  • @jegr3398
    @jegr3398 3 роки тому +224

    You'll never catch me copper! I ain't talkin' see!

  • @johnathandavis3693
    @johnathandavis3693 3 роки тому +128

    My Grandma was born in 1910, left us in 1981. She would still say "Well, she just thinks she's the cat's pajamas." She taught my mom how to dance the Charleston in the kitchen in the 1950's. I so miss the old folks...

    • @riverraisin1
      @riverraisin1 3 роки тому +5

      My Mom (born in the 30's) used the term cat's meow quite a bit. Staying power.

    • @chamade166
      @chamade166 3 роки тому +1

      Most were racist and anti diversity.

    • @imasonofadeadbeat2928
      @imasonofadeadbeat2928 3 роки тому +15

      @@chamade166 And here we go. I knew it'd be posted somewhere.

    • @johnmolinari2384
      @johnmolinari2384 3 роки тому +4

      @@chamade166 go back in your little hole

    • @fuzzamajumula
      @fuzzamajumula 3 роки тому +3

      Me, too! My grandmother raised me. She never knew how much she meant to me.

  • @nigel_saxon
    @nigel_saxon Рік тому +7

    Some of these slangs are still used today

  • @lilivonshtup3808
    @lilivonshtup3808 3 роки тому +297

    I always liked the phrases, "The bees knees" and "The cat's pajamas/meow" meaning to hold something or someone in high esteem. Also the phrase, "I'll say" as in "I'll say she is" meaning emphatically agreeing with someone. "It's a cinch" or "A piece of cake" as in that's easy. "Blow this joint" to leave. "the lowdown" information. "Say" always starts a sentence to emphasize something. As in, "Say, that's a beautiful girl." I really think the '20's and '30's were the birth of slang.

    • @kristinen9854
      @kristinen9854 3 роки тому +3

      I was thinking that while watching the video that the 1920's was the birth of slang.

    • @ShortBusScotty
      @ShortBusScotty 3 роки тому +12

      23 skadoo

    • @Whipslinger1
      @Whipslinger1 3 роки тому +15

      @@ShortBusScotty 23 Skidoo. That was a Policemens term, first used by a Police officer to a bunch of loiterers on, if all places, 23rd St. Meaning, you've got to clear off of 23rd St. No loitering allowed. True story. I was surprised when I first read it. Thought it was way to contrived to be believed, but that is the story. And that's how that frase got born.

    • @darknessanddistance4469
      @darknessanddistance4469 3 роки тому +12

      How about " take a powder" As in disappear quietly from the Gathering? Call a bathroom a powder room has something to do with that

    • @marilynndonini7247
      @marilynndonini7247 3 роки тому +12

      @zorian. When the Flatiron Building was built at the intersection of Broadway, Fifth Avenue and 23rd Street, New York City in 1902, it was discovered that its triangular shape caused a wind tunnel effect at its base that blew women's skirts up almost to their knees--a sight that attracted many a young man to hang around the building hoping to get a glimpse of forbidden body parts such as female ankles and calves!!! Although the expressions "23" and "skiddoo" (both meaning roughly "get outta here" or (another 20's slang term!) "Scram") had arisen separately a few years prior to the building, there's no doubt that the cops used them both in rousting the would-be "mashers" from ogling the free show--hence this apocryphal attribution of the origin of "23 skiddoo"! It sure makes a great story though!!!

  • @demidevil666
    @demidevil666 3 роки тому +280

    Fun fact regarding the exclamation "and how!" mentioned here:
    In German, we have an equivalent exclamation, "und wie!", which is the exact same phrase, translated directly word by word. And it is used in the exact same manner and context.
    It has gone out of fashion over the past few decades, but it is still very recognizable and doesn't sound off to a German speaker.

    • @4oska763
      @4oska763 3 роки тому +10

      Now that I think about it in Polish it would sound something like 'A jak! ' or 'A jakże!'

    • @S_--
      @S_-- 3 роки тому +6

      To add onto the polish guy's comment:
      Southern Slavic languages have this too. We say
      "И то како!"
      Or alternatively we use the full variation of the middle word to get
      "И тоа како!"
      We like to shorten words a lot so the first one would probably be more common.

    • @bumschak12
      @bumschak12 2 роки тому +5

      also we have the word "verhökern" which directly translates to the slang word "hock". And it is also used as slang.
      I wonder if we adapted the american phrases, or if the influences came by german ancestors. I fear we will never know :D

    • @texasred2702
      @texasred2702 2 роки тому +1

      Interestingly there's a similar Spanish (or at least Mexican) expression, "Y que?" which roughly means "so [what]?"

    • @mreunome
      @mreunome 2 роки тому +1

      And how!....conjures up Moe, Larry, Curly...And Shemp

  • @claudiamiller7730
    @claudiamiller7730 2 роки тому +314

    That pic of the “bobbed” hairstyles was wonderful! As a 73YO gal with naturally curly hair - of course I lusted after those straight, smooth styles…but was consigned my entire life with the crimps, curls, swirls and frizz that my now Very Fancy grey hair has lived thru…and triumphed over…Curly Girls Rule!! Thank you for this fun adventure back into “cool speak”!,

    • @jillian.x
      @jillian.x 2 роки тому +8

      I always thought that The Bob was magnificent when styled with curls! Did you ever try to style your hair that way when you were younger?

    • @claudiamiller7730
      @claudiamiller7730 2 роки тому +16

      @@jillian.x..When I was little I wore ponytails and braids to control my hair andI forced my locks straight during the late ‘60’s to have a “Beatle Bob”…thanks to my sister being a hairdresser…and my hair was Shirley Temple quality curly so didn’t have much chance to combine sophisticated smooth, chic hair with Soft, easy curls! My hair is still actually wildly curly - and the humidity in North Carolina adjust is just NOT helping at all!💙

    • @daviddowns7552
      @daviddowns7552 2 роки тому +2

      humidity here in n.c. is usually terrible.

    • @hambeastdelicioso1600
      @hambeastdelicioso1600 Рік тому +1

      That lovely lady was Louise Brooks who starred in some of the most groundbreaking silent films of the era.

    • @alexshatzko1381
      @alexshatzko1381 Рік тому +1

      bobby pins

  • @staceymarie6895
    @staceymarie6895 8 місяців тому +3

    I knew everyone of these. I'm 62, my parents are 89. Thus, my grandparents used these expressions.
    Yes! All of them 😂

  • @kickinvideo333
    @kickinvideo333 3 роки тому +140

    "You know I believe, and how!"
    - The Beatles 1969

    • @peaceonearth8693
      @peaceonearth8693 3 роки тому +11

      The Three Stooges were often saying pretty much that. Especially the "and how" part.

    • @toddschendel4999
      @toddschendel4999 3 роки тому

      @@peaceonearth8693 😎

    • @imasonofadeadbeat2928
      @imasonofadeadbeat2928 3 роки тому +3

      Specifically, George Harrison.

    • @karaamundson3964
      @karaamundson3964 3 роки тому +3

      Paul loved his father's old (1920s) records, and they would often play & sing the tunes.

    • @ginny3491
      @ginny3491 3 роки тому

      Yep!

  • @kzrmix2305
    @kzrmix2305 3 роки тому +79

    I once saw a tip jar that had a note on it saying "We knead our dough" I have always thought that was really clever

    • @SerunaXI
      @SerunaXI 2 роки тому

      You exist for your wage, you work for your tip.

  • @uncle5164
    @uncle5164 3 роки тому +56

    It’s hard to think my grandma lived through the 1920’s and is still here....

    • @steviestuff1319
      @steviestuff1319 3 роки тому +24

      Talk to her as much as you can. She is a book of knowledge that won't be around forever.

    • @waynegnarlie1
      @waynegnarlie1 3 роки тому +4

      I can't believe Louis Armstrong was already popular, and had a hit with Heebie Jeebie in 1926. He lived a long amazing life.

    • @kenkaniff6142
      @kenkaniff6142 3 роки тому +5

      Good for you, all mine are dead. Thanks for making my night pal.

    • @robintst
      @robintst 3 роки тому +1

      Cherish the time.

    • @uncle5164
      @uncle5164 Рік тому

      @@steviestuff1319 I just found this video again, it’ll be hard to because she speaks Cantonese and I don’t, but she’s still going strong at 97.

  • @ohgodpleaseno7360
    @ohgodpleaseno7360 Рік тому +1

    The term “Cheater” is still used in the welding trade, a cheater is a magnified lense inserted into your helmet to magnify what is seen, typically used by older welders with bad eyesight.

  • @imontosomething2609
    @imontosomething2609 3 роки тому +129

    I didn't know how old "Heebie Jeebies" was.
    My mom would say that and she's born in the late 60's. I say it sometimes myself.

    • @courthebrave
      @courthebrave 3 роки тому +2

      It’s crazy how far american language has come

    • @garyd3725
      @garyd3725 3 роки тому +4

      I still use it. Was born in the 60s

    • @bear1more287
      @bear1more287 3 роки тому +1

      As I understand heebie jeebies was a sickness or illness from bad bootleg liquor 🥃 back in prohibition

    • @tallboy2234
      @tallboy2234 3 роки тому

      Heebie-Jeebies was my Mom’s expression, and she was born in the ‘20s🤔

  • @indramami9080
    @indramami9080 3 роки тому +466

    This was reallly cool & informative to me as I take care of patients who were born in the 1920s & 1930s. I used the slang I picked up on this video to them & it’s starts a great conversation about their times being young and growing up! They often remember all the terms and start glowing and reminiscing back to those times..I always end the conversation by telling them they were much cooler back then than we are now and they get a kick out of that & agree with me! 🙂

    • @msmltvcktl
      @msmltvcktl 2 роки тому +30

      They think you're hotsy totsy, maybe even the bee's knees for banging on about their heyday

    • @madelineflorio8460
      @madelineflorio8460 2 роки тому +15

      this is the sweetest comment. I hope to be able to do the same. language is really magic

    • @robertrobertson6605
      @robertrobertson6605 2 роки тому

      *a Hater of God, Sodo, (Brian McMiLLan) & a DeMonicRat Voter, sent Me, this Message ->*
      *Quote=> Discuss it? w. MaryAnn when the Great god Jehovah pairs (R.R.) up on GiL's Isle*
      *in the Sky . . . & PLeae seek HeLp!* [ End Quote from the Demo Sodo ]!
      *Love the part about JeHoVah GOD Pairing me up with Mary Ann, for ETERnity!!!*
      *But, of Course this Demo Sodo was FAKE & You Read its END ReMark!!!*
      *NOW YOU KNOW why, in just 3-months, I'LL be Voting Every RePubLiCan on My BaLLot!!!*

    • @johnmoney7626
      @johnmoney7626 2 роки тому

      Ya then you have to change they’re diapers and stop old grandpa from putting pine sol on his garden Salad because he thought it was olive oil!

    • @YakkoWarnerTower
      @YakkoWarnerTower 2 роки тому +2

      I don't understand a lotta of them lol but I noticed them too. I grew up in the 90's but they're so nostalgic, witty and kind of familiar. 😂♥

  • @eggheadusa
    @eggheadusa 9 місяців тому +3

    I was born in the 40s but I actually still use most of these today

  • @clxud9776
    @clxud9776 3 роки тому +639

    so... is anyone gonna talk about how 1920's "sheik" is functionally the same as 2020's "chad"?

    • @yigebru505
      @yigebru505 3 роки тому +64

      History repeats itself

    • @yeanah2571
      @yeanah2571 3 роки тому +71

      It doesn't, Chad is not desirable..

    • @aifebleshoj4049
      @aifebleshoj4049 2 роки тому

      Genius

    • @PhyreI3ird
      @PhyreI3ird 2 роки тому +85

      @@yeanah2571 originally it wasn't, but I think since it was a term used by incels to throw pity parties for themselves and wallow in gloom, lots of people have embraced it as a positive term to trigger them.

    • @SerunaXI
      @SerunaXI 2 роки тому +56

      @@yeanah2571 Chad may have started as derogatory, but the context of it shifted and became embraced by those that felt it was meant for them. Through some cultural evolution, it's come to represent peak male attractiveness. The derogatory context can still be active, but most brush it off and look to the compliment of the word instead.

  • @jameswillis1742
    @jameswillis1742 3 роки тому +347

    I grew up in the 80s so "puttin' on the ritz" to me was a song by Taco

    • @cazgerald9471
      @cazgerald9471 3 роки тому +10

      I grew up in the 70s, I also remember "Young Frankenstein" ua-cam.com/video/ab7NyKw0VYQ/v-deo.html

    • @DarkKnightwing75
      @DarkKnightwing75 3 роки тому +13

      I didn’t know Mexican cuisine sang in the 1980s

    • @KingNothing22
      @KingNothing22 3 роки тому +7

      it was Written by Irving Berlin, Sung by Peter Boyle and Taco.

    • @jamesmcinnis208
      @jamesmcinnis208 3 роки тому +2

      Because we have no record of earlier use of the expression.

    • @InflatablePlane
      @InflatablePlane 3 роки тому +5

      NGL. Tacos version is pretty dope.

  • @viking670
    @viking670 3 роки тому +87

    Man I use over 80% of these words still today !

    • @DarkReapersGrim1
      @DarkReapersGrim1 3 роки тому +15

      Look at your name, haha.

    • @UgandanAirForce
      @UgandanAirForce 3 роки тому +2

      ikr, it's crazy how the word "tomato" i still used

    • @viking670
      @viking670 3 роки тому +3

      @@DarkReapersGrim1 Yeah and I'm good with that, makes me more cultured and civilized !

    • @jansendwan1221
      @jansendwan1221 3 роки тому +5

      @@DarkReapersGrim1 I'm a millennial and I used a lot of these words too.

    • @amaddenmind4597
      @amaddenmind4597 3 роки тому +3

      Happy 110th birthday

  • @daveidmarx8296
    @daveidmarx8296 8 місяців тому +1

    I still use "Dough" and "Hot" and I was born in 1970. Conversely, I only learned of "Cheaters" over the past decade.

  • @Zane_Endicott_
    @Zane_Endicott_ 3 роки тому +68

    Sheik was just the 20’s version of a chad

  • @timotheoszmudski4426
    @timotheoszmudski4426 3 роки тому +153

    "Hot" is still - or is now again - THE most common slang word for stolen

    • @BlueShadow777
      @BlueShadow777 3 роки тому +2

      A stolen *item*

    • @timotheoszmudski4426
      @timotheoszmudski4426 3 роки тому +2

      @@BlueShadow777 if you are attempting to correct me about what would be an oh so subtle technicality, I don't believe the correction is necessary because due to its fallacious nature. 'Hot', even in slang from now and 100 years ago is an adjective. Never a noun, which it would have to be in order to be referring to the actual items. It refers to a quality of the items. I welcome a good argument or proof that I'm wrong. Also I apologize if I totally misread your comment

    • @JetteSwan
      @JetteSwan 3 роки тому

      Slang terms used in specific circles or specific purposes don’t change much over the years and terms that many people use change more rapidly. So a “hot car” can mean “stolen car” for a hundred years but no one has said a drunk person was “tight” since your grandparents were born

    • @Painfulwhale360
      @Painfulwhale360 3 роки тому

      @@timotheoszmudski4426 can you use “hot” in a sentence in context to what you explained? I’m not sure I’ve heard hot used for something that was stolen.

    • @timotheoszmudski4426
      @timotheoszmudski4426 3 роки тому

      @@JetteSwan wow that's crazy counter intuitive

  • @kbfton
    @kbfton Рік тому +19

    Sheik: Rizz.
    Putting on the Ritz: Drip.
    Whoopee: Vibin'.

  • @zfnemesis6071
    @zfnemesis6071 Рік тому +6

    This video be bussing bruh fr fr no cap🔥🔥💯💯🔥

  • @silence.9376
    @silence.9376 3 роки тому +432

    *"The human brain is the most complex structure in the whole entire universe"*
    _-Human Brain._

    • @ahhh9k
      @ahhh9k 3 роки тому +16

      d e e p

    • @tristanblackford7903
      @tristanblackford7903 3 роки тому

      The universe is a structure; a construct of spacetime, matter, energy, dark matter, dark energy, and the laws of physics.

    • @5people829
      @5people829 3 роки тому +3

      @@tristanblackford7903 dark matter and energy are just filler words until we find what they actually are or what causes them.

    • @tristanblackford7903
      @tristanblackford7903 3 роки тому +2

      @@5people829 that does not affect the validity of my statement.

    • @tristanblackford7903
      @tristanblackford7903 3 роки тому

      people unless they are simply products of some physical law such as gravity is, then I guess I'm being redundant.

  • @jsat5609
    @jsat5609 3 роки тому +83

    3:28 "And how!" There was a law firm in one of the 3 Stooges films from the 1930s named Dewey, Cheatum and Howe.

  • @jennifercarter6788
    @jennifercarter6788 3 роки тому +85

    I'm so old that I knew all these phrases. But what about "cat's pajamas" and "bee's knees"?

    • @andreassmed2255
      @andreassmed2255 3 роки тому +12

      Strangely enough Bee’s knees is still somewhat in use... At least enough for me to know what it means.

    • @fedupwithfedforever4151
      @fedupwithfedforever4151 3 роки тому +7

      Thats more like 50's slang

    • @TrulyJennyMorris
      @TrulyJennyMorris 3 роки тому +2

      @@fedupwithfedforever4151 No, those are most assuredly from the 1920s.

    • @carlastaton4150
      @carlastaton4150 3 роки тому +3

      @@andreassmed2255 I've read that 'bee's knees' is a corruption of the Italian pronunciation of 'business', as in 'That's the business!' Phrases like 'cat's pajamas' were jokey variations of 'bee's knees'.

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable 3 роки тому +4

      This seems to be US slang, but there would be lots of British slang too.
      "Hairy of the heel"
      Watch Jeeves and Woster for that sort of thing.
      Also I think many of these phrases weren't used commonly by everyone. Poorer people had their own slang, like Cockney slang etc. I'm sure it's the same everywhere.

  • @mijoepa
    @mijoepa Рік тому +1

    Some of these really need to make a comeback.

  • @aidan_toole_0585
    @aidan_toole_0585 3 роки тому +385

    Can’t wait for the 2021 versions featuring “Drip” and “POGGERS”

    • @lordfenix17
      @lordfenix17 3 роки тому +15

      I do believe both of those became popular as recently as 2014-16.
      *Drip for sure*

    • @foursongs
      @foursongs 3 роки тому +5

      @@lordfenix17 well they are more popular now

    • @ls200076
      @ls200076 3 роки тому +1

      @@foursongs 2014-2016

    • @lesteryaytrippy7282
      @lesteryaytrippy7282 3 роки тому +6

      The 2010's slang, likely to go on to the 2020's but we'll see

    • @emmimiax8337
      @emmimiax8337 3 роки тому

      Pogggg

  • @ryonagana
    @ryonagana 3 роки тому +71

    it's weird because "and how!" is still used in Brazil translated literally as "e como!" and have the same meaning in english

  • @j_g9109
    @j_g9109 2 роки тому +91

    I didn’t know “wet blanket” was so old! It may not be used as commonly as in the 1920s, but it’s still used in the present. 😊

  • @AndrewAment
    @AndrewAment Рік тому +1

    Crazy that the word “lit” was used still back then and today. Same way. “Being intoxicated”

  • @jacquellgrandy6240
    @jacquellgrandy6240 Рік тому +208

    As a young man living in the 20s I can confirm “fried” means to be inebriated on a certain substance 😅

    • @GenXMafia
      @GenXMafia Рік тому +18

      Baked

    • @garystinten9339
      @garystinten9339 Рік тому +14

      Grilled. Cooked.

    • @againstthepods4316
      @againstthepods4316 Рік тому +4

      i wonder what all the people in these pictures are up to i would love to meet them they probably have so many stories now from that time.

    • @Chris_yes
      @Chris_yes 11 місяців тому

      dirt nap @@againstthepods4316

    • @Hookythehammer
      @Hookythehammer 11 місяців тому +6

      ​@@againstthepods4316the 1920s were 100 years ago and the people in these clips were in their 20s, 30s and 40s, I'd say there's a very good chance they're all dead by now 🤣🤷🏻‍♂️🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @VanInhalin
    @VanInhalin 3 роки тому +94

    pretty sure I saw reviewbrah in the background of one of these scenes

  • @crobybaby
    @crobybaby 2 роки тому +22

    4:15 thought it said rizz at first

    • @kaiserluch9322
      @kaiserluch9322 Рік тому +2

      dude same

    • @ImKevPev
      @ImKevPev Рік тому +2

      Probably where Rizz came from

    • @blueshadows684
      @blueshadows684 9 місяців тому

      @@ImKevPev it came from charisma.

    • @No5kye
      @No5kye 3 місяці тому

      me putting on the rizz

  • @draugnaustaunikunhymnphoo6978

    I like how some of these words are still used commonly today.

  • @bigbonez9160
    @bigbonez9160 3 роки тому +21

    “Fried” is still used in Australia but mostly refers to people smoking weed

  • @akemap4
    @akemap4 3 роки тому +214

    "and how" is used here in Brazil. But we say it in portuguese, of course. "E como!"

    • @k1lg0re50
      @k1lg0re50 3 роки тому +9

      There's also the very common French "Et comment!".

    • @Lopyj
      @Lopyj 3 роки тому +12

      also in Germany it is used as "und wie!"

    • @everope
      @everope 3 роки тому +11

      And in Dutch "en hoe!"

    • @sk8rissk8in
      @sk8rissk8in 3 роки тому +9

      @@everope how dare you! please censor your vampy comment.

    • @internetidentity2678
      @internetidentity2678 3 роки тому

      in Italy we have "eccome!"

  • @saltyspaceman5697
    @saltyspaceman5697 3 роки тому +118

    i've used dough, wet blanket , hot, and heebie jeebies and the people I was talking to and associated with knew exactly what I was talking about and used them too

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 3 роки тому +7

      They were hep.

    • @johnbarber4549
      @johnbarber4549 3 роки тому +3

      In Alaska, heeby jeebies means alcohol withdrawal symptoms.

    • @Lee_Morse
      @Lee_Morse 3 роки тому +3

      I've used all of those as well as "and how" in my daily speech all my life.

    • @johnbarber4549
      @johnbarber4549 3 роки тому +2

      @@-oiiio-3993 hep to the jive, Daddio.

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 3 роки тому +2

      @@johnbarber4549 A solid sender.

  • @ArnoTheLad
    @ArnoTheLad Рік тому +1

    The fact that we use some of these still

  • @timfolly7323
    @timfolly7323 Рік тому +228

    I was born in the late 60s, all of these are not new to me and I think other than the people born after 1990s are easily recognized. These slang words have lasted longer than slang of today Slang of today goes out fashion in years not decades and decades. Good video!

    • @robertkees6048
      @robertkees6048 Рік тому +2

      Bully for you!

    • @timfolly7323
      @timfolly7323 Рік тому

      @@robertkees6048 lol

    • @Monster11B
      @Monster11B Рік тому +13

      Very true. I know all these and I was born late in the 70s. Some are still used today. While Gen Z is making up new ones.

    • @maureen9115
      @maureen9115 Рік тому +12

      I was born in the early 50s & as teens we used mostly all these idioms. Except tomato & sheik. Queen of Sheba was an insult about another female that thought they were hot. I just called someone a ragamuffin a few days ago.

    • @timfolly7323
      @timfolly7323 Рік тому +9

      @@maureen9115 ragamuffin was used a lot by my parents and aunts and uncles. Us kids looked like a bunch of ragamuffins to them evidently.

  • @coolumbus1947
    @coolumbus1947 3 роки тому +47

    Interestingly, in czech we use the phrase "A jak!" in the same way "And how!" was used. It literally translates to "and how" too.

    • @darkdwarf007
      @darkdwarf007 3 роки тому +2

      we have it in Russian too, it sounds like "A kak!", or "i kak!", but it very rarely used on its own, usually you would want to put a verb that relates to the topic right after the expression

  • @gil15100
    @gil15100 3 роки тому +60

    Interestingly, "and how!" still exists in Brasil, translated as "e como!", and it have the same meaning and usage and shown on the video.

    • @Sheerspeechcraft
      @Sheerspeechcraft 3 роки тому +1

      And in many other languages

    • @blaisebaileyfinnegan
      @blaisebaileyfinnegan 3 роки тому

      'And how' is still around; the only one of these I doubt is still in common use is 'cheaters'

  • @marscaleb
    @marscaleb Рік тому +1

    It's amazing to see how much of this slang is still in use today. How many decades can make that claim?

  • @SophieBird07
    @SophieBird07 3 роки тому +100

    A couple phrases my aunt used to use, e.g., “she laid him out in lavender”. Hollered at him. I found out later this stemmed from lining coffins with lavender.
    Another was “Oh! I feel ( or look) like I’ve been pulled through a knothole backwards”. It always cracked me up envisioning it.

    • @lynn6221
      @lynn6221 2 роки тому +3

      Never heard of the 1st one but mom always said the 2nd alot. Lol

    • @AdamOwenBrowning
      @AdamOwenBrowning 2 роки тому +5

      here in England I've heard my grandmother exclaim I "look like I were dragged through a hedge backwards". A knothole is way more interesting and inventive though!

    • @SophieBird07
      @SophieBird07 2 роки тому +3

      @@AdamOwenBrowning Hedge is pretty descriptive though! Sort of describes me after I’ve been out in the garden!

    • @Brando64
      @Brando64 Рік тому

      @@AdamOwenBrowning "Looking like I've been dragged through a hedge backwards" is what my mum used to tell me from when I was a little lad until I was in my 20s. As an Australian born in the mid 1960s we used a lot of English slang.

    • @VincentPaterno-hs2fv
      @VincentPaterno-hs2fv Рік тому

      To 2023 ears, "laid him out in lavender" implies homosexuality.

  • @olivergiles6731
    @olivergiles6731 3 роки тому +66

    The german "Und wie! " is the literal "and how" . Still in common use today...

    • @kilgoretrout6136
      @kilgoretrout6136 3 роки тому

      Wow. Thanks for that.

    • @albertog7245
      @albertog7245 3 роки тому +1

      "Still in common use today..."
      No...it's not.

    • @sireggmond7101
      @sireggmond7101 3 роки тому +1

      @@albertog7245 Yes, it is.

    • @olivergiles6731
      @olivergiles6731 3 роки тому +5

      @@albertog7245 "Und wie" still IS in common use in German today! !
      I AM GERMAN !
      What's your qualification regarding the german language?

    • @AG-gy7qq
      @AG-gy7qq 3 роки тому +9

      Saying “I AM GERMAN!” In all caps just feels right

  • @Kokopilau77
    @Kokopilau77 3 роки тому +62

    In AZ, we used “fried” to describe someone dropping a hit of acid as it was “frying your brain.” This was in the mid-90s

    • @brothermanv
      @brothermanv 3 роки тому +6

      In the DC-area, it's used the same way, but for weed. Definitely not alcohol

    • @ianjohnson1495
      @ianjohnson1495 3 роки тому +3

      I’m in AZ and we use fried for weed and acid/shrooms now. I mostly see “fried” for weed and tripping for acid/shrooms. Another common one for both is “I’m gone”

    • @inunez7271
      @inunez7271 3 роки тому

      Here in Texas we use it for both, a lot of the slang he was describing is still used a lot over here. I thought it’ll be more common but reading the comments guess I was wrong,

    • @ThunderSims
      @ThunderSims 3 роки тому +1

      Can confirm, I live in az and have friends who have done it

    • @ThunderSims
      @ThunderSims 3 роки тому

      @@ianjohnson1495 sup fellow arizonan?

  • @RobertCampsall
    @RobertCampsall Рік тому +1

    Most of these terms are still perfectly acceptable and understood by anyone born before 2000.

  • @xeokym223
    @xeokym223 3 роки тому +37

    My mom always said I looked like a "street urchin" if I came in looking rough after playing outside. I never understood it when I was a kid because I wondered how I could look like a spiky creature from the ocean just because I was dirty.