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Local Slang


BrainHurtBoy...2
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Hello,

At the risk of sounding like an asshole, I've been noticing some new slang popping up in Seattle that my out-of-town friends don't know of, so I was wondering a bit about slang that develops in small regions, particularly in the United States. So some of the slang I've heard in Seattle is:

Dip(verb): Suddenly leave, Urgently depart: "Dude, cops! We gotta dip!"

Hecksa: I've heard hella and hecka, but not hecksa outside of Seattle.

Grippa: Many, very: "I'ma get grippa chicken nuggets up in this bitch!"

Bareknuckle: A form of street brawling common amongst party-folk, a fight club-like activity of mindless, friendly combat.

The Borg: Used when referring to Microsoft. I like this one.

That's all the really unique stuff that comes to mind. Anyway, to the point:

1. If you've heard of these, would you please post if so, where in the world you heard it, and from which kind of group (teens, etc.)

2. If your area has local slang, please post that as well.

I know this is weird, and again, if I sound like an asshole, I'm sorry, but I needed a friendly environment to test this out in, and I thought this would be cool.

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The fact that you think this is a friendly environment amuses me. But I'll play:

 

1. I generally hear slang from people I want to punch in the face.

2. I heard a friend of mine actually spell out ooh-em-gee once. I punched him. Right in the face.

 

Thread succes!

Edited by D-K
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i'm from new england and...

yes, we really use the word wicked all the time and if you're from new england and say you don't you're a goddamned liar

no, we don't like it when people do it to pander to us (i'm looking at you advertisements)

 

i know some people from the south and they use some strange slang that i can't recall at the moment and i've heard people from the pittsburgh area use "yins" a lot, meaning like you all or a variant of "you's"

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in Nor Cal we say hella a lot. I suppose we also have stupid stuff like hyphy and thizz face.

 

Thizz face - The facial expression on one's face after taking ecstasy/MDMA. A proper thizz face includes one's teeth grinding together or having their mouth closed. The facial expression is often compared to the one in which a person smells urine.

 

Hyphy - Short for hyperactive. The phrase "to get hyphy" refers to when an individual acts or dances in an overstated, fast paced, and ridiculous manner. This is similar to the southern phrase "to get crunk" but without the drug and alcohol references.

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in Nor Cal we say hella a lot. I suppose we also have stupid stuff like hyphy and thizz face.

 

Thizz face - The facial expression on one's face after taking ecstasy/MDMA. A proper thizz face includes one's teeth grinding together or having their mouth closed. The facial expression is often compared to the one in which a person smells urine.

 

Hyphy - Short for hyperactive. The phrase "to get hyphy" refers to when an individual acts or dances in an overstated, fast paced, and ridiculous manner. This is similar to the southern phrase "to get crunk" but without the drug and alcohol references.

We often say hyphy here, as well, but only sarcastically when making fun of Bay Area people. Not that we're any better.

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Toshi, I thought hyphy was dead. Like, deeeeeeeaaaaad. I didn't know it was still alive, though. :scratch:

 

Never heard of thizz face (like, wut), but agreed on hella, though.

 

Ohh, also, I hate the Valley Girl omigosh trend. Like seriously, fuck that trend so much. They should have kept it locked inside San Fernando Valley, where it belongs.

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i'm from new england and...

yes, we really use the word wicked all the time and if you're from new england and say you don't you're a goddamned liar

no, we don't like it when people do it to pander to us (i'm looking at you advertisements)

 

i know some people from the south and they use some strange slang that i can't recall at the moment and i've heard people from the pittsburgh area use "yins" a lot, meaning like you all or a variant of "you's"

 

Bahahaha. Yins and Yuns, happens all the time around here. I don't use them because I think I would shoot myself if I did. It's most the older folks, or the young true, honest to god red necks.

 

As for the "warsh", see above. Same thing. No idea how they got that pronunciation though...

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People here say "schloaj" or "sloi" (no official spelling) to mean slut/tramp. I guess the English phonetic spelling would be "shloy". I tend to use this to describe the type of hussies you would only find around here.

 

Then there's "hendig", meaning "very" or "extremely". As in "hendig sjiek, jong!" I think less of people who use that, because that means they grew up here and don't speak normal Dutch.

 

Both of these are quite regional, so I doubt D-K or raine ever heard either of those. Come to think of it, I don't even know where raine is from...

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It's an aged word, but "dillweed" has been coming back. First time I remember it being used was Beavis and Butthead, but years went by before I started to hear it again.

 

I dunno about everyone else, but lately a few people and I have been using "jack." You know, something like, "Man, I'm so jacked up right now..."

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Bahahaha. Yins and Yuns, happens all the time around here. I don't use them because I think I would shoot myself if I did. It's most the older folks, or the young true, honest to god red necks.

i had an ex that i stayed friendly with go to college there and the way that i understood it is that it was mostly a steel worker thing?

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Bahahaha. Yins and Yuns, happens all the time around here. I don't use them because I think I would shoot myself if I did. It's most the older folks, or the young true, honest to god red necks.

i had an ex that i stayed friendly with go to college there and the way that i understood it is that it was mostly a steel worker thing?

 

I wouldn't call it just a steel worker thing, but a lot of people that work at plants around here do tend to have thicker accents.

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I remember the whole "gotta dip" phrase from my college years, back in 2000-2004 in the Midwest.

 

Grippa sounds pretty dumb to me.

 

Hella has been around for more than a decade, too.

 

I don't think I'm young enough to encounter much new slang in my real life. I do encounter professional lingo all the time, though.

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