38 Terrific Slang Terms From The Last Century

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 5 лип 2024
  • Wastoid, wedgie, and dumpster fire, oh my! 20th-century slang has some of our favorite words and phrases. Learn all about the fun origins of some pretty whacky and absolutely real slang terms from the last hundred years.
    And for even more fun facts about your favorite words, check out Mental Floss's latest book:
    www.simonandschuster.com/book...
    Website: www.mentalfloss.com
    Twitter: / mental_floss
    Facebook: / mentalflossmagazine
    Discord: discord.io/mentalfloss

КОМЕНТАРІ • 173

  • @patriciafillmore407
    @patriciafillmore407 5 місяців тому +22

    76 yr old great grandma who loves one of the newer slang words, "metal", to describe something really tough like the goose that took on a bear to protect its flock.

  • @kandipiatkowski8589
    @kandipiatkowski8589 5 місяців тому +8

    When I was in high school, "no shit sherlock" was popular. Lol

  • @elainebenes7971
    @elainebenes7971 5 місяців тому +41

    Slang is used in speech long before it shows up in print. I can assure you “dumpster fire” was used long before a 2008 usenet post.

    • @SECONDQUEST
      @SECONDQUEST 5 місяців тому +5

      Yeah, I don't think the people who wrote this video disagree with you they aren't dumb.

    • @LittleBitofHopeToo2518
      @LittleBitofHopeToo2518 5 місяців тому +2

      It's like Boob Tube. That was used to refer to TV's almost as soon as they were invented. If you have ever seen inside one, you will instantly know why.

    • @Summalogicae
      @Summalogicae 5 місяців тому +1

      Unless you have evidence, you can’t actually assure us of anything

    • @graham2631
      @graham2631 5 місяців тому +1

      Yes we can, convince you? Thats entirely different.

    • @Summalogicae
      @Summalogicae 5 місяців тому

      @@graham2631Not to be pedantic but, sure, I suppose assurances can be devoid of evidence, but then what actually is an assurance if it’s empty of content?

  • @Zeyev
    @Zeyev 5 місяців тому +6

    Great fun. 1) I was part of an information center in a Federal building in the 1970s. A man came in and asked where the Don Ameche was. I told him where the pay phone was and then jokingly added, "You didn't think I would understand you." He admitted that was true. 2) You may want to check with a Yiddish speaker about the pronunciation of Yiddish words. The Yiddish "nudge" is not said the same as the English "nudge."

  • @chompsn9
    @chompsn9 5 місяців тому +5

    My favorite old slang is "got the morbs" and it's exactly what it sounds like even though it's from the 1880's. It needs to make more of a comeback

  • @cassieoz1702
    @cassieoz1702 5 місяців тому +4

    I grew up in 60-80s understanding 'sozzled' to mean (politely) drunk, and snafu is alive and well.

  • @batya7
    @batya7 5 місяців тому +7

    Couldn't think of a favorite slang but was taken back to my college days, late 70s, when "bad" (usually said with a heavy emphasis) meant "good or notable" (as in "that's a really baaad guitar solo). Today, someone might say that something is "sick," meaning "good" in the same manner. Not exactly slang, but I'm sure there is some kind of lexicographic fancy word to describe that practice.

    • @alexanders562
      @alexanders562 5 місяців тому +1

      I was astounded to hear a young man getting an award, and thanking his mom, because "She's the shit."

  • @carlupthegrove262
    @carlupthegrove262 5 місяців тому +1

    Wow, the 50s, 60s, and 70s slang brought back some crazy memories. Thanks

  • @kshanksr
    @kshanksr 5 місяців тому +6

    My mom is from Long Island, so I grew up hearing a lot of random Yiddish words, including "noodge". Although it was typically used as a noun rather than the verb.

    • @alexanders562
      @alexanders562 5 місяців тому

      Yes, that is how I have heard it used. "Don't be a noodge. Yer making me mashugina"

  • @ho77iday
    @ho77iday 5 місяців тому +8

    Anyone else here been using _dumpster_ fire way before the 2000s?

  • @ibnbob7847
    @ibnbob7847 5 місяців тому +4

    Noob (and noobie) were used in the US Army in Vietnam. Synonym for F-in' New Guy (FNG). Not complimentary: new guys are dangerous to their teammates until they learn a lot.

  • @richdorak1547
    @richdorak1547 5 місяців тому +1

    My all time fave is from the 60s. "bag" , as in " What's your bag ? " or what are you into ? your thing ? The great Sammy Davis Jr. was asked about a particular activity and Sammy replied " It's not my bag , man . " I still throw it out there now and then ! Ha !

  • @KingsleyIII
    @KingsleyIII 5 місяців тому +9

    Maybe it's just me, but I first heard "wastoid" from the skating episode of The Fairly Oddparents, when Vicky said: "Oh, you want _this_ crown? You got a better chance of some loser 12-year-old _wastoid_ falling from the sky, and plowing me into the ground!" and then that exact thing happens.

    • @Laura-kl7vi
      @Laura-kl7vi 5 місяців тому +2

      Depends when it was. All we know is that John Hughes coined the word, made it up, for his film The Breakfast Club, in 1985. It must have taken off from there.

    • @0ValdeCalebros
      @0ValdeCalebros 5 місяців тому +1

      lol kids

  • @S.p.a.c.e.C.o.w.b.o.y
    @S.p.a.c.e.C.o.w.b.o.y 5 місяців тому +3

    "Going out on the piss" going for an alcoholic drink or 3. Not sure how far out of the UK this is used but it is widespread amongst the younger crowd as is "Getting/Got pissed. 😊

  • @teleriferchnyfain
    @teleriferchnyfain 5 місяців тому +3

    So many of these slang terms are very much still in use. Interesting to see where they come from.

  • @auldfouter8661
    @auldfouter8661 5 місяців тому +2

    Interesting that galore itself comes from Scottish Gaelic and Whisky Galore is a well known book by Compton MacKenzie , later a film.

  • @waverlyking6045
    @waverlyking6045 5 місяців тому +3

    My favorite 80s-ism:
    Smooth Move Ex-Lax

  • @ShaneMcGraw
    @ShaneMcGraw 4 місяці тому +2

    I just said “grody” the other day. I’ve never stopped using it. Hell’s bells, I didn’t realize it had gone out of fashion.

  • @bonwatcher
    @bonwatcher 5 місяців тому +3

    This video was gnarly dude.

  • @rebeccafree9755
    @rebeccafree9755 5 місяців тому +4

    I like 'silly goose' as in 'dont be such a silly goose' 🦆

  • @HayTatsuko
    @HayTatsuko 5 місяців тому +4

    Snafu's close companion "fubar" has long been a favorite of mine. "Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition" -- though it's often stated using that spicier F-word instead, and my actual first exposure to it, as a child, was seeing "FOO.BAR" used humorously as an example filename in a computer programming manual. "Kludge" is another favorite, programming jargon that carries a similar meaning to "bodge" -- specifically, a makeshift, inelegant solution to a problem.

  • @alexemann
    @alexemann 5 місяців тому +2

    You could make a whole 38 word list of slang words for "drunk."
    My personal favorite is "He's legless."

  • @trevinbeattie4888
    @trevinbeattie4888 5 місяців тому +3

    I remember making boondoggles. When I heard it used as a term for wasteful activity, I thought that’s where the Boy Scouts got the name for the braid!

    • @lynnhettrick7588
      @lynnhettrick7588 5 місяців тому

      I was in my 20s in the ‘90s. Many of my college friends were consultants for big companies. We used the term “boondoggle” to mean to get something for free, specifically dinner and drinks. “I totally boondoggled that client event.”

  • @Apophis324
    @Apophis324 5 місяців тому +9

    Wicked has to be the best slang term ever. Not that I use it as much as I used to.. Maybe I should get back into using it ^^

  • @theseventhangel9768
    @theseventhangel9768 5 місяців тому +4

    Bazinga!
    [canned laughter] 😅

  • @spwolftech
    @spwolftech 5 місяців тому +10

    Wow, in middle school we did this. my entire class was told to find the oldest person we could and get slang words from when they where kids and we each got 10 words and made a huge "slang-tionary". this was in 1987-89 not sure exactly. I interviewed a church friend of my moms who was 96 at the time, and yes i got the oldest slang, i just wish i still had my copy of our slang-tionary from back then, could be fun to look back on.
    (Meridian, Idaho if anyone else from that time just happens to see this and happens to remember this old class project)

    • @saltwithlove2269
      @saltwithlove2269 5 місяців тому

      Of course , the Viz comic calls a slang collection a " profanisarus" . 👍

    • @saltwithlove2269
      @saltwithlove2269 5 місяців тому +1

      " kneedusters" 😍 that one

  • @FPSRockstar
    @FPSRockstar 5 місяців тому +4

    balloon knot

  • @SeanLamb-I-Am
    @SeanLamb-I-Am 5 місяців тому +3

    Yeet.
    Yep, that's my favorite of all the slang I've heard so far.

    • @hhairball9
      @hhairball9 5 місяців тому +2

      Please, what does it mean?

    • @VikingTeddy
      @VikingTeddy 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@hhairball9To yeet is to throw, chuck, send flying.

    • @hhairball9
      @hhairball9 5 місяців тому +2

      @VikingTeddy thank you!

  • @OreoDave
    @OreoDave 5 місяців тому +4

    So fetch 💜

  • @CrystalWilliamsoncoach
    @CrystalWilliamsoncoach 5 місяців тому +3

    Fierce from the 1980s I still sometimes use this word around Gen Z & Millennials at work.

  • @delusionnnnn
    @delusionnnnn 4 місяці тому +1

    If my mission were to use a time machine to infiltrate the language with one word of modern slang, it would be "spicy" in the colloquial, dramatic sense.

  • @btetschner
    @btetschner 5 місяців тому +1

    A+ video!
    Fascinating slang!

  • @DragonKazooie89
    @DragonKazooie89 5 місяців тому +1

    7:40 - Kind of funny since that's the name of the town in Bailly and Mandy and the complete opposite happens

  • @SlippyMcKnot8472
    @SlippyMcKnot8472 5 місяців тому +1

    The bomb 💣 was a huge one everyone used when I was a kid.

  • @jphilb
    @jphilb 5 місяців тому +4

    Pretty sure the 1900’s are the last century.
    Unless I missed a joke.

  • @BadMonkey4448
    @BadMonkey4448 5 місяців тому +1

    My favorite slang term is Bitchin. I still use it today even though my surfing days are long over.

  • @JWentu
    @JWentu 5 місяців тому +1

    1:35: my brain completely blown & shocked

  • @blissedher
    @blissedher 5 місяців тому +1

    I always liked getting some “trim”. And still do.

  • @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515
    @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 5 місяців тому +1

    I always liked "gardy loo", which is what you shout just before you pour your chamber pot out the window into the street below. It's adapted from the French.

  • @SteMail926
    @SteMail926 5 місяців тому +3

    4.17 'sozzled' is still used by people in the UK, and it's pretty similar

    • @auldfouter8661
      @auldfouter8661 5 місяців тому

      I was thinking about that , true.

  • @cybersandoval
    @cybersandoval 5 місяців тому +1

    salt and pepper was reference to the flavor of smoking it, peppersweet now because pot's improved a lot

  • @maryvon8518
    @maryvon8518 5 місяців тому +4

    copacetic

  • @BearMeat4Dinner
    @BearMeat4Dinner 5 місяців тому +1

    When da breakfast club came out I was under ten years old.. I don’t remember da waistoide word you guys mentioned!!! lol!!

  • @YeeSoest
    @YeeSoest 5 місяців тому +3

    I really like "taking an L" because it came from teamsports that give you a chance to redeem and get over that L quickly, making "taking an L" at least feel like it entails accepting the loss somewhat lightly if not graciously which ... Has to make a return please😅

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 Місяць тому

    I don’t freak out when I leave home without a phone. I love to leave it at home!

  • @BigTimeRushFan2112
    @BigTimeRushFan2112 5 місяців тому

    Like totally a rad vid dude!

  • @novtek
    @novtek 5 місяців тому +3

    What about a neomaxizoomed weebee? (Also in breakfast club)

  • @PoorBoxJohnsDoubleVoodoo-nb3eq
    @PoorBoxJohnsDoubleVoodoo-nb3eq Місяць тому

    The term 'Couch potato' was coined by cartoonist Bob Armstrong who went to court to copyright it when it took off and was denied. His couch potatoes were a group of guys who sat around all day watching tv. I'm sure the comics are available

  • @VickiCampbell-1216
    @VickiCampbell-1216 5 місяців тому

    "Flaked". 80s? California? "Dude, I totally flaked. Forgot to meet up with you." 😄"Shark Bait" is funny, too.

  • @nebulan
    @nebulan 5 місяців тому +3

    Yeet is the best word

  • @chadhiga
    @chadhiga 5 місяців тому +1

    This was rad

  • @YCIGAFSN
    @YCIGAFSN 5 місяців тому +1

    Dumpster fire and noob/newbe were around in the late 70's and 80's. Tubular was around in the late 70's as well. Several others listed here I remember hearing and using as a kid. Slang terms may fade out of use after a time; but most, if not all of them, are recycled back into our language at some point.

    • @burner555
      @burner555 5 місяців тому

      I misread "tubular" as "tumblr" 💀💀💀

  • @alexanders562
    @alexanders562 5 місяців тому

    10:20 Grody was from grotesque. George Harrison says it in Hard Days Night to an interviewer

  • @prestonstephens7719
    @prestonstephens7719 5 місяців тому

    Even texting you can tell how old someone is. That’s groovy. Talk to the hand. Do you need to tinkle? Shut the back door. OK girlfriend. Rad “”!!!!”

  • @AndrewBrown-fq6vp
    @AndrewBrown-fq6vp 5 місяців тому

    My favorite slang term is "glass" as a verb!

    • @mrcryptozoic817
      @mrcryptozoic817 5 місяців тому

      Had to think a bit, but now I remember that. Use the binoculars.

  • @marlon82mc
    @marlon82mc 5 місяців тому +1

    "Cool" is immortal.

  • @karnasaur
    @karnasaur 5 місяців тому

    Glad to see you fixed the title.

  • @tommunyon2874
    @tommunyon2874 5 місяців тому

    When we moved across town in the mid-1950s the neighborhood had more teenagers. They were using words like " shaunt" to mean " you don't say", and "nay" to, of all things, mean "yes".

  • @ChadwickTheChad
    @ChadwickTheChad 5 місяців тому

    "You're so molded!" Mid 80s slang in the SF Bay Area. It was used when someone was proven wrong in an argument, basically meaning "See? I told you!" I believe it predates the other Bay Area slang term "Hella."

  • @blessedveteran
    @blessedveteran 5 місяців тому

    You missed my favorite slang growing up... "As If" ... yes, I grew up in California 😂👍

  • @nyls1717
    @nyls1717 5 місяців тому +3

    “Jonathan Green”? Nice try I know that’s just John Green with a fake mustache. Come on out John, if you want to be back on mental floss you can just say so!

  • @camgere
    @camgere 5 місяців тому

    Vout oreenee.
    You can't go wrong
    if you stay latched on.

  • @dj1211
    @dj1211 5 місяців тому

    I was a teenager in the 80's and have never heard of the Stranger Things...I have heard of wastoid. Breakfast Club is still one my favorite movies. St Elmos Fire?

  • @fishdaddy35
    @fishdaddy35 5 місяців тому

    AM and PM come from Latin: ante meridian and post meridian (before and after noon).

  • @madamesalamander16
    @madamesalamander16 5 місяців тому

    I still say "grody" and "bitchin'." The 80s was a fun time to be a kid, but being a teen in the 90s was great. We had The Jerky Boys and Jay and Silent Bob to introduce us to slang like "sizzle chest" and "snoochie boochies."

  • @schmittelt
    @schmittelt 5 місяців тому

    Sweet!

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 Місяць тому

    How about “Kia Boyz”? Kids who break into Kia automobiles and steal them by hot wiring with a USB cable

  • @hawk5096
    @hawk5096 5 місяців тому

    I'm from the Westside of Chicago, and I remember using Bogart in the 1990s. I admit that I didn't know where it came from.

  • @JohnTeig
    @JohnTeig Місяць тому

    Poseidon's Kiss. - Look it up 😛

  • @joelbradley1531
    @joelbradley1531 5 місяців тому

    I have had a tuff time counting all the slang words for vomit.

  • @lapierredave
    @lapierredave 5 місяців тому

    As recently as the 90s, I and some friends referred to drunk as "zozzled" for the slurring of speech while drunk. This was probably the origin back then, too. (guessing).

  • @btetschner
    @btetschner 5 місяців тому

    x 2:15 A kid in my elementary school class literally chased ambulances, he once rode his bicycle three miles outside of town to see where the ambulance was going and had to give up.
    x I like that San Fairy Ann...
    x I read Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange (fantastic book!)
    x I like the original definition of boondoggle.
    x I am 100% behind passion pit, love it!
    x I like a-go-go
    x I am 100% behind Bogart (for hogging the joint)
    x Love couch potato, boob tube, guilt trip, wedgie, tighty-whities, valley girl (that music video is awesome), groady, to-the-max, boo-yah, and dumpster fire.
    x a/s/l...that is a trhowback! I remember that from ICQ and Yahoo chat.
    x I had a classmate in graduate school who was a phish-head, she would make patchwork clothing and sell it on the tours.
    x showrooming is possibly a winner...

  • @EmilyEverglot
    @EmilyEverglot 5 місяців тому

    From the 80's LAGNAF. Like SNAFU it's actually an acronym.

  • @rubylilamoore6322
    @rubylilamoore6322 5 місяців тому

    Can't help noticing the similarity between san fairy ann, sweet fanny adams, and sweet f- all

  • @robbruce2128
    @robbruce2128 5 місяців тому

    Now I gotta go re-watch _Ball of Fire_ about a bunch of eggheads writing an encyclopedia of slang who stash a gun moll on the lam and keep her on ice until she sings like a canary on her gangster daddy. "Egghead," I think I like that one best. Or Poindexter.

  • @Serai3
    @Serai3 5 місяців тому

    By the way, another 50's term for "drunk" was "stoned". The hippies picked up the expression from their parents and used it to mean high from weed. :)

    • @dchall8
      @dchall8 5 місяців тому

      Beatniks (1950s counter culture teens) used stoned for drunk, ya dig? If you didn't drink or were socially awkward, then you were L7. L7 found its way into music in Wooly Bully by Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs. Hippies (1960s and 70s counterculture youth) did convert stoned as you say, so another term had to fill the void for drunk. It was juiced (sometimes sloshed), and people who drank but did not partake in drugs were known as juicers. So there were stoners and juicers. Square and the related L7 faded quickly in the 60s. Rarely did the juicers and stoners party together. Bitchin', huh! Stoners or juicers who had a sudden, unusually rational thought might refer to the thought as far out, and then the thought would disappear just as suddenly. Usually the thought was not all that rational. Bummer.
      Boo-ya I believe was taken from Marine Corps training. It's an easy way to spell a guttural sound that has no spelling. Or it could be a way to say "hurrah" in the fashion of WHO-ra or WHO-ya. I first heard it in the early 70s, but I'm sure it was around prior to that.

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 5 місяців тому

      @@dchall8 Yeah, I was a kid in the 60's, dude. I heard all that.

  • @royrucci6240
    @royrucci6240 5 місяців тому

    Sozzeled still means drunk in south west UK.

  • @OldManMontgomery
    @OldManMontgomery Місяць тому

    My largest problem with 'slang' is the adaption of a perfectly good word to mean something else. Like the word 'gay'. When I was young (a rather long time past) 'gay' meant 'cheerful and carefree'. Now it signifies something else.
    Along with that, slang tends to have a short use life. No one I know uses the term 'tubular' anymore. (Except as a descriptive turn for a particular shape.)
    On the other hand, 'cool' seems to keep the meaning of 'quite appropriate' or 'very useful' and has for a number of decades. I am told it derived from the slang 'hot' meaning much the same. But 'hot is still around in a more specific meaning.

  • @VikingTeddy
    @VikingTeddy 5 місяців тому

    What no cowabunga? We need more surfer slang.

  • @matthewhansen2126
    @matthewhansen2126 5 місяців тому

    Never heard wastoid before now and I was one

  • @NightKitchenQueen
    @NightKitchenQueen 5 місяців тому

    To say someone is a "solid sender" is to describe them as excellent, the best, etc. -- whether it came from Little Richard's "Slippin' And Slidin'" or he lifted it from common slang, I don't know.

  • @ArchoniusXXVII
    @ArchoniusXXVII 5 місяців тому

    I was born in the 70s and grew up mostly in the 80s - I’ve never heard the term “wastoid” until now.

    • @lynnhettrick7588
      @lynnhettrick7588 5 місяців тому +1

      I’m Gen X and I remember it, but it wasn’t used that often

    • @ArchoniusXXVII
      @ArchoniusXXVII 5 місяців тому +1

      @@lynnhettrick7588 my only defense is that I didn’t watch The Breakfast Club (or most John Hughes films)

    • @robertmiller9735
      @robertmiller9735 5 місяців тому +1

      @@lynnhettrick7588 I never heard people saying that either, but for a year or so everybody was going around saying "demented and sad, but social!".

  • @KattMurr
    @KattMurr 5 місяців тому

    I like the British term for drunk- pissed...and the acronym FUBAR...

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson 5 місяців тому +2

      Fubarred: when a snafu goes nuclear. The military does love their initialisms! (See also: radar, sonar …)

  • @alexanders562
    @alexanders562 5 місяців тому

    I think"cool" is a astoundingly versatile slang word. It can be calm, ok, good, very good, happy, stylish, trustworthy, an affirmation, so much, but not as versatile as "shit"

  • @josephmiller4234
    @josephmiller4234 5 місяців тому

    "Deadass"

  • @peterbonucci9661
    @peterbonucci9661 5 місяців тому +1

    The internet slang "Pwn" as in to dominate. It should be younger than noob.

  • @ithydoodles
    @ithydoodles 5 місяців тому

    I think backseat bingo is hilarious 😂 Backseat bingo in a passion pit 😂 car s** at a movie.

  • @dbirchlaw
    @dbirchlaw 5 місяців тому

    My favorite slang term is "Dude". I am 42 and everyone of both genders still get called that all the time.

  • @quintessenceSL
    @quintessenceSL 5 місяців тому

    Mardy. Just because I see it so often now.

  • @jefferymorman295
    @jefferymorman295 5 місяців тому

    My favorite slang is actually a fictional expletive: TANJ.
    There Ain’t No Justice.

    • @robertmiller9735
      @robertmiller9735 5 місяців тому

      Do you swear by Finagle too?😉

    • @jefferymorman295
      @jefferymorman295 5 місяців тому

      finnagles corollary to murphys law is an important rule to know! @@robertmiller9735

  • @cijmo
    @cijmo 5 місяців тому

    Most of our slang is Scottish but I just want to say you have probably blown some minds showing people what an actual ampersand is. So many think that " @ " is an ampersand.

  • @jamesinsmanna8499
    @jamesinsmanna8499 5 місяців тому

    Bring back John!

  • @bunkerman99
    @bunkerman99 5 місяців тому

    See you later Alligator; in awhile Crocodile.

  • @robumf
    @robumf 5 місяців тому

    Favorite. Last decade.
    A young male ask why he watches My Little Pony.
    I just watch it for the plot.
    That's all it takes to create a slang.

  • @ASteamingHam
    @ASteamingHam 5 місяців тому

    This video is some pumpkins.

  • @haeuptlingaberja4927
    @haeuptlingaberja4927 5 місяців тому +1

    "Movin' to Montana soon
    Gonna be a Dental Floss tycoon (yes I am)
    Movin' to Montana soon
    Gonna be a mennil-toss flykune"
    Frank Zappa, "Montana," 1973

  • @birdsdaword
    @birdsdaword 5 місяців тому +1

    Far out

  • @bigbossimmotal
    @bigbossimmotal 5 місяців тому +1

    Just for the record, the last century was the 20th century and it ran from 1900 to 1999, not from 1924 to 2024.
    Think about it.
    It CAN also mean the last 100 years, but if people mean the last 100 years, that is generally what they say.

    • @LittleBitofHopeToo2518
      @LittleBitofHopeToo2518 5 місяців тому +3

      Yes, her use of "the 19th century" and referring to the 1900's seemingly interchangeably was a bit confusing too.

  • @PerspectiveEngineer
    @PerspectiveEngineer 5 місяців тому

    Hep hep

  • @tracylallier9498
    @tracylallier9498 5 місяців тому

    Styling