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@davidaston577322 күн бұрын
Gen Z = the Z represents the gap between their ears.
@TefiTheWaterGipsy9 күн бұрын
@@davidaston5773 😂😂
@samgraves733027 күн бұрын
This is so interesting. As for the nouns becoming verbs. My daughter informed me this morning that ‘her hair is not hairing’ to expressed how her hair wouldn’t go right….
@Pleoryo26 күн бұрын
I like this one, x is not x-ing, it’s a really concise way of saying x is doing what I want it to be
@everythingisfine998826 күн бұрын
That's how I used to talk in elementary school. It's now part of the young adult lexicon? Crazy... But it does simplify the language
@childrenoftheinfinite25 күн бұрын
@@everythingisfine9988 Simplification is not always a good think, that's reverting to caveperson days. It displays a lack of intelligence. The modern day need to speed everything up for productivities sake is actually a huge negative. Hence Gen Z's massive epidemic of anxiety over everything. I had a traumatic childhood and I've lived my entire life with a level headed mindset, why, because I understand that something need time and thought.
@everythingisfine998825 күн бұрын
@@childrenoftheinfinite that is a bit of a stretch don't you think? Languages are evolving all the time. Shortening in simplification on one end leads to expansion and diversification on the other. So many professions have their own intrinsic communication standards. So much so it can be viewed as another language. Why double down on only one, when I can expand my knowledge in several different directions simplifying things
@TOMTOM-zj5xj24 күн бұрын
We have been doing this for centuries in Brazilian Portuguese all nouns can become verbs it's up to each individual if they find it convenient to the meaning they want to say at some moment or to express some idea
@notmyrealname6272Ай бұрын
I laughed when a 12-year-old piano pupil of mine told me how the generation below her(age 9 etc) spoke in a language she couldn’t understand. 😂
@danielwhyatt3278Ай бұрын
LMAO. Oh god every generation is doomed now I guess.
@notmyrealname6272Ай бұрын
@@danielwhyatt3278 😱😂😂
@TrademarkedIPAdress23 күн бұрын
Same with me lol. I know a kid who's 11 years old, and she'd always tell me she wished we were born in the same year (2004) because her generation sucks and she doesn't want to be called that she's this age and that she's categorized as being in this generation. It's strangely hilarious lol.
@Worldaffairslover22 күн бұрын
She’s gen alpha
@JosieStev20 күн бұрын
Panic, was a word my mom said in the 60s. I meant Epic Fun
@pink22129 күн бұрын
I love this breakdown of how the English language is evolving over time. Internet culture has definitely accelerated this. Very fascinating!
@joefur162523 күн бұрын
Definately stretching the word 'evolution' there skibidi
@ianlowden616821 сағат бұрын
Depressing
@salihahilmy8804Ай бұрын
Neil, you are here, one of my favourite person of 6 minutes english
@Daily_me-v2bАй бұрын
And he looks great ❤
@taozhao179727 күн бұрын
Just what I wanna say, I always hear his voice, too!
@Hanady_star27 күн бұрын
The same ❤❤
@bbclearningenglish26 күн бұрын
Hi Saliha. This is Neil from BBC Learning English. Thanks for your comment. We're glad you like the video!
@paulhefferon374921 күн бұрын
Words are flowing out like endless rain into a paper cup They slither wildly as they slip away across the universe Pools of sorrow, waves of joy are drifting through my opened mind Possessing and caressing me Nothing's gonna change my world
@robertmarmaduke18614 күн бұрын
Dream I wonder if Tibetan monks meditate, alone, High in the unreachable Himalayan loftiness, Over how many yak-butter candles it would take To sink the Sun into an Ocean they will never see; Then in the swollen Darkness left by its passage, Do they dream of how many mushroom clouds It would take to melt the last of the glaciers? But then, far below in crude villages Unseeing common people must suffer Mobs of feral dogs, barking incessantly Over some nascent leg-lifting 'CRISIS!', before the awakening Dream comes.
@ButtershyWise4 күн бұрын
I love how this starts with proper articulate English and then ends with "gonna"
@eliashagstamАй бұрын
Him saying “the skibidi rizzler” has got me on the floor 😂😂 thanks bbc
@charlotteforever744228 күн бұрын
Could you explain please what it means?
@bbclearningenglish26 күн бұрын
Hi Elias - Neil here from BBC Learning English. My kids thought that was hilarious too!
@eliashagstam25 күн бұрын
@@bbclearningenglish HAHAH that’s awesome, those kids are gonna dominate the etymology field one day
@yvettetorres782922 күн бұрын
elias only because you’re young still. If you’re lucky, you’ll grow older too and then you’ll be uncool or whatever to those new kids.
@eliashagstam22 күн бұрын
@@yvettetorres7829 I sure hope so, it’s the circle of life
@victoriaschwarz697224 күн бұрын
I’m a teacher of English in Costa Rica and love BBC English, specifically Six -Minute English. Thank you.
@robertmarmaduke18614 күн бұрын
Taught TESL in Cambodia to young adults and the one time I got them up and shouting was a lesson on Street Slang in English and Gangsta' Thug Life. Chinese Hot Money + )oe Lockdown threw their tour guide dream into the dumpster. Does Mandarin have slang?
@Elifk878725 күн бұрын
I have students who can't speak English as a second language, fail in English exams but use English slang and these new created English words perfectly and coherently. That's really astonishing. They use it combined with their native language. A native speaker of Turkish language without any knowledge of English can not understand them. They have newly created words in their native language as well.
@yvettetorres782922 күн бұрын
Interspersed? Hmmm… big word, but adults don’t commonly use it to mean combined.
@gregordvsКүн бұрын
Why is it astonishing? This is expected.
@mydogisbaileyАй бұрын
I’m a Canadian living in Paris and what surprised me is that some french young men use “goat” even when speaking french
@EuiHwanP27 күн бұрын
It has surprisingly made its way into Korean as well, used more as an adjective than a noun
@The22Jeanne26 күн бұрын
Well, a lot of English internet/SMS slang and acronyms got pretty swiftly mixed/added into the French ones ; And into/with the general or youth slang : C'est-la-vie, IMHO (!)
@LH-ri1iz26 күн бұрын
I only learned about the Ancronym goat when Inoxtag was using it😂
@vanyaliveshere25 күн бұрын
Oh wow, that's quite a surprise to hear. Thanks for sharing!
@maximus2170022 күн бұрын
Yeah we're using a lot of English "New" words while speaking french. "T'es le goat" is now a common sentence to cheer someone in France
@hodnebudesnekde25 күн бұрын
My favourite language revival story: Czech is spoken in the Czech Republic today thanks to a massive revitalisation effort in the late 1800s. At that point German was the official language in the Czech lands. Czech was mostly spoken in the countryside and by uneducated people because German nobles had most of the influence. Many Czech books were lost during that time and it was pushed out of higher education in favor of German. However, a large scale national identity movement was happening in Europe at the time and the Czechs were no exception. A group of Czech scholars collected the language, unified the grammar, wrote and distributed books, newspapers, founded theatres... All this was done with a focus on improving the general public's education level which helped to spread the language even more. It's noticeable to this day - although Czech did go through natural changes (mostly simplification of grammar), it's still very structured. If you ask "why is XY written like that?" it's nearly always because there's a clear rule for it. (Whereas with English I often have to look into the history/evolution of a word if I want to know more than "because it just is".)
@Diana0240021 күн бұрын
That is so interesting and so cool that they revived the language
@cunawarit26 күн бұрын
I’m pushing 50, but I’ve been talking like this for a minute. It’s lowkey a skibidi conundrum-like, with the drip I rock, the way I riz up conversations, and my suave Latino looks, nobody can tell if I’m Gen whatever or whatnot.
@thenightporter26 күн бұрын
😂
@everysingleone871424 күн бұрын
Straight off the chain, bra
@henriettaokpala964223 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
@charlie89122 күн бұрын
please, i'm begging you, just stop. its like watching a world war 2 vet don a backwards baseball cap and a skateboard
@wanderingthepeaks22 күн бұрын
Speaking of neologisms, shouldn't that be 'latinx' looks? ;)
@mathematrucker26 күн бұрын
I don't know about earlier epochs, but it's ironic that kids nowadays think they're doing something new when in fact their parents and grandparents did the exact same thing. There is nothing wrong or harmful about it; it's just a natural way to distinguish your age group while you have the chance to, before the adulthood gig forces you to play by different rules.
@gidiess788024 күн бұрын
100% if my parents tried to use my generation slang, I would cringe and want to die! Young language is for young people and that's fine. The generation after them will have their own language too. That's how it goes
@Indianabagpuss23 күн бұрын
Hot diggigidy dog !
@yvettetorres782922 күн бұрын
Spot on mathmatrucker 😊
@DasAlena21 күн бұрын
yes but now its borderless! thats the thing
@GamerNugget1821 күн бұрын
I think it’s funny when old ppl use the new gen terms ppl should just say whatever they want anyways all these words are so accessible online, no reason to create exclusivity from it
@peterrichardson800325 күн бұрын
The fact that the content doesn’t begin until 1:03 says a lot about BBC’s understanding of modern social content and this generation‘s attention span
@marketads125 күн бұрын
This distraction of discussing the messenger rather than the message, is transparent, and used when the cause is lost.
@peterrichardson800325 күн бұрын
@@marketads1 what does that even mean? Sounds like a weird Google translate
@lvseka25 күн бұрын
Oh my, have some patience, it’s an 18min video, 1 minute is appropriate warm up time and eases one into the video. Not every BBC video should be an opportunity to scrutinise.
@lian123824 күн бұрын
This is the new paywall
@AccidentalScience21 күн бұрын
@@lian1238genius.
@acapedit24 күн бұрын
Rename this “how Gen-Z and Tik Tok are changing the way THEY speak” is more accurate. I don’t know anyone outside of that generation who speaks that way.
@IMI66023 күн бұрын
My 12 years old nephew told me, "oii unc, ma dood gona o you gosh not a you oya o you dood" Her mother told me, he's saying his friend coming home, please welcome him
@jamesdavies538622 күн бұрын
They become the “we” you are referring in fairly short order.
@juelzm14921 күн бұрын
Literally came to type this very comment.
@midknight21 күн бұрын
We’ve progressed only to regress. I miss natural selection. The days when the dumb didn’t survive past puberty.
@varunchoudhury719321 күн бұрын
And let's thank god / whatever greater entity one believes in for THAT.
@Kim-lc3fv22 күн бұрын
I'm a 71 year old American living in Copenhagen and Berlin for last 32 years. I cannot get my Scandinavian colleagues to stop using "Me and so and so are going to..." and these folks are PhDs! ALSO: both native and non-native speakers are now always saying, eg. "Tom gave the book to Sally and I". This drives me crazy! It's so blatantly grammatically incorrect, yet people, even of my own age, who certainly were not saying that 50, 60 years ago and certainly were taught proper grammar, are now speaking this way. I feel that I'm fighting a one woman grammatical battle. OK, I'm an old Boomer, but I'm really curious as to how English teachers deal with this.
@davidadams239520 күн бұрын
I feel your exasperation. _Me for I_ and I for me_ is becoming too prevalent in every corner of the English-speaking world, regardless of age. By the way, do many Scandinavians understand English?
@Kim-lc3fv20 күн бұрын
@davidadams2395 Exactly!! 99% of folks in all Nordic countries (Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Iceland) understand English and speak it well. They have no dubbed tv or films as is the case in Germany, France, Spain...
@twatts152320 күн бұрын
Yes, it’s so weird! Also, the dangling prepositions. “Where do you live at? Where did you buy that from?”
@nanciolivieri8821Ай бұрын
Good to see you all, but specially Neil, because I listen all the podcasts from bbc learning english and always wonderered how you look like!
@titonik929026 күн бұрын
What you lool like
@bbclearningenglish26 күн бұрын
Thanks Nanci - Neil from BBC Learning English here. I hope you continue to enjoy our podcasts!
@sannefridolinАй бұрын
What about using the word "like" several times randomly sprinkled into every sentence? It drives me crazy!
@KaylahHАй бұрын
That has been a thing way before social media
@foobarf8766Ай бұрын
That's US vernacular English. Nothing to do with social media, British have even more annoying habits like omitting glottal stops, like ya o wha I een
@EdwardLindonАй бұрын
It's an intrinsic part of every language.
@EE-uj6twАй бұрын
Something about it drives me mad as well. “Ohhhh my gawdddd,like literallyyyy,like” in that sing song valley girl voice 🤬
@henrietta9206Ай бұрын
Like, I totally understand like...what you're like...saying..like. 🙂
@abrahama264323 күн бұрын
I'm a 50 year old who works with youth and how I understand it is. . . Rizz comes from Charisma. Someone who has lots of charisma is "The Rizzler". Skibidi is just a troll word. Kids love to say it because its fun to say, and its funny watching adults disect it and try to find a definition for it. It all blew up when a kid made a viral video singing a song using nothing but these words.
@Diana0240021 күн бұрын
What is the name of the video?
@abrahama264321 күн бұрын
@@Diana02400 I can't find it, but the song is called "Sticking Out Your Gyat for the Rizzler". There's a million videos on KZbin now with people singing it, but I remember the original being some skinny kid standing in his bedroom singing it. There's also a heavier set kid who calls himself the Rizzler, but its not him.
@alyx443612 күн бұрын
Yeah, This is classic intellectual stupidity. It really isnt that diffiicult you dont need to be a language expert lol they need a degree in common sense.
@user-km2bz8iy5oАй бұрын
I've noticed similar the convergence of US and Australian slang among people 12-29, undoubtedly due to social media like IG and TIkTok
@J.A.S.S.23 күн бұрын
Its not just English , all other languages are evolving
@SamRommer20 күн бұрын
Devolving*
@Super_Grover_20 күн бұрын
7:22 I’m happy this was brought up. Black and Latino Queer cultures have LONG been a huge source for a lot of slang or new words in the mainstream.
@Yakoshi28324 күн бұрын
It’s not a new language but just slang, something we have had for a long time but slang words change with generation! Social media helps people ‘learn’ the new slang which travels much faster around the world/internet. I don’t really like when my pre-teen speaks to me in slang and he knows that. He must use proper vocabulary when he’s at home or speaking to others (teachers, shop keepers etc). But when he is with his friends he then uses what ever words he wishes as they are on his ‘level’.
@phill685921 күн бұрын
They use it because you hate it. Start using all the words that they use, they will stop.
@shakeyj452321 күн бұрын
Slang is how new languages develop. When there is so much slang that only some can understand it, it has evolved into a new language. You making your Pre-Teen speak without slang is a good idea. I remember seeing people try to interview for jobs, and they could not avoid using slang, and it lost them the job. The ability to choose when to use it, and when not to is really a superpower that will give them an advantage later in life. Take that from someone who knows first hand.
@Liusila20 күн бұрын
@@phill6859The child is testing out treating you like an equal. The fact that you get pissed off at that makes me sad, I feel bad for the kid.
@Pseudo___19 күн бұрын
Every older generation: ‘These youths and their slang’
@dbreardon26 күн бұрын
I think a lot of young people these days are working hard to keep all things hidden and private. They are also very clique driven and seem to purposefully attempt to go out of their way hide or separate themselves from others outside their clique. They are generating brand new words to describe whatever they are talking about. Previous generations simply expanded the meaning of already known words. My only issue with this is that some of them are unable to adequately converse or write with others outside their clique group. This makes it difficult to work alongside them in a work environment.
@MyRedmamba26 күн бұрын
About 90% of what they are saying is just bits taken from AAVE. Just ask an African American of any age and they will tell you what this so called new secret gen z language is lol!
@starhawk6325 күн бұрын
I'm over 60, and I have to say I've seen new slang words being made throughout my life, as well as new meaning given to already-existing words. I think social media, and especially videos on social media, are introducing so many new words and new meanings than before. I think TV accelerated the process, but Internet and social media accelerated it exponentially.
@silkbuttons23 күн бұрын
They are narcissists and bullies, who are the most nastiest ever yet the most “offended “ with”mental health” as their perceived “counter offence. “. Teacher retiring soon.
@shakeyj452321 күн бұрын
No, this is just normal, and happens in every generation. The difference is what starhawk says. It is just accelerated and expanded over larger areas due to social media.
@RSJ194720 күн бұрын
@@shakeyj4523and across the world. Same slang.
@MasterKoala77721 күн бұрын
"Heavy" (as profound, intense, serious) was very well used back in the 1980s, even here in the Philippines. Whenever I watch Back to the Future, it brings back memories when I hear Marty use it. It was so widespread, but eventually disappeared from the world's vocabulary.
@twatts152320 күн бұрын
Of course! Heavy D and the Brand New Heavies were popular musical artists.
@kvk196015 күн бұрын
It has no disappeared at all in North America, eg. "Heavy" subjects like divorce, or psych or calculus, etc, was never slang.
@KotramailАй бұрын
This was entertaining to watch and it had me wondering of the chances that the world will be speaking the same language ages down the road.
@fernandafantini728128 күн бұрын
From my perspective, the most perfect scenario would be me speaking in my native language (Portuguese) and you understanding everything - and vice-versa. I believe it’s rather more interesting than the idea of everybody speaking/understanding only one language. First of all, this last option is the laziest one, and we are on a constant need of improving our minds. It’s healthier, it helps to prevent Neuro degeneration. Second of all, diversity improves the cultural quality of our knowledge. Because language IS culture. Think about what Z-ers (and Pandemic-ers) could do on slang innovation if they could use absolutely ALL the languages in the world as tools. It would be mind blowing!! And third of all, technology is so helpful when it comes to simplifying our language learning, so why not to completely dive into this ocean? 😍😍😍😍
@indrajitghosh418725 күн бұрын
I can imagine people digging out this video 50 years from now, remastering it, and them commenting that people were so eloquent "back then." Obviously, by then, teens would have been reduced to using screeches and grunts for communication!
@ЭлинаРомис28 күн бұрын
I was very glad to hear Neil's familiar voice. My favorite in 6 minutes english
@bbclearningenglish26 күн бұрын
Hi, it's Neil here. So happy you like 6 Minute English!
@Corsuwey23 күн бұрын
Just look at English's phrasal verbs and how we have other words from other languages that have almost the same exact meaning. In addition, phrasal verbs and verb + prepositions are daunting for extremely non-native English learners. For example, "look up" does it mean to find a word in the dictionary, or to physically focus your eyes towards that direction?
@1MHCS13 күн бұрын
This was refreshing to watch. Intelligent and open conversation on an interesting subject, a subject that is usually framed as a battle between between generations no less. Love it.
@darkhorsiesmedia20 күн бұрын
The simplification of language in the UK has some deep roots, how tabloid newspapers are written for an 11 year old comprehension level to allow for quick reading, and how all public services aim for plain English so that it can be inclusive to all. So the only time people interact with more complex vocabulary is in formal education.
@orion637227 күн бұрын
Every generation has its lingo. Only the best words and phrases - the ones that have wider, universal appeal - last. Survival of the fittest…words. A good extension of this conversation would be: what makes a good, long lasting word? There is most certainly a level of je ne sais quoi at play, but there are probably more concrete indicators as well.
@SkpalTubeАй бұрын
We are also seeing a reverse trend with people exploring languages beyond their mother tongue - Americans learning Korean or Japanese due to the rise of popular culture.
@abhinavkohli905924 күн бұрын
This was an extremely interesting conversation and very enlightening. I wish there was participation from some Gen Z members to get a first-hand perspective on the topic.
@bananabear926619 күн бұрын
Do you have any questions lol
@claudiamueller547529 күн бұрын
When I was a teenager here in germany, finding anything to watch in english was sooooooo difficult. Now, my son watches english KZbin videos and he has not even started it in school. He has been using „cringe“ without knowing it is a real word. Just so fascinating.
@tabby7324 күн бұрын
I'm German but haven't lived in Germany since 1990. When I visited last in 2007 I was amazed how many English words were used everywhere - it must be so much more now. Another thing I noticed, my cousin who is in his 60s doesn't speak English but his son, now 30, speaks the language like a native because he grew up with the Internet.
@mofolk889616 күн бұрын
🇨🇦When I was growing up in the ‘60s and ‘70s, my dad’s job took us around the world. At that time, French was the “diplomatic” language and my parents made sure we learned it (not Quebecois but 🇫🇷); English just wasn’t seen as a global option. Fast forward to 2024 and my Austrian cousins’ grandchildren visiting us are completely fluent in English. I did not see that coming lol😂
@williamFlat25 күн бұрын
The evolution of English isn't just about new words entering the vocabulary-something that's been happening for centuries-but also about changes in intonation and vocal patterns. Two notable examples are upspeak and vocal fry. Upspeak, with its rising intonation at the end of statements, can create confusion as it often makes definitive statements sound like questions. Meanwhile, vocal fry, characterized by a low, creaky tone, not only grates on some listeners but may even pose risks to the speaker’s vocal health over time. These shifts highlight how language evolves in ways that impact not just meaning but how communication is perceived and received.
@ThomasGilmore-fi6gb25 күн бұрын
English will DEVOLVE in the minds of the ignorant and lazy.
@kimtudor933122 күн бұрын
I enjoyed Sophia's contributions. They were outstanding. Beginning the discussion by saying Sophia you don't have kids was totally unnecessary. She isn't learning about language by hearing how her children speak, she has studied this and is an expert.
@aycha_144922 күн бұрын
I came here to say something like this! I loved the interview and topic, but I felt that Sophia was interrupted all the time to ask Neil a question, "So, Neil...?", while I found her inputs really REALLY interesting. In addition to "She isn't learning about language by hearing how her children speak, she has studied this and is an expert.", I also see that she is learning a LOT about languages' evolution by listening to everyone else's children speak and analysing everything around that. So, she has solid credibility in my eyes. And also based on statistics.
@jerdonsbabbler351521 күн бұрын
Sophia was insightful to be sure, and the interviewer gave her due respect, I thought.
@luckm885229 күн бұрын
The term skibidi exploded in Malaysia cutting across all age groups owing to a most unexpected source - a religion-based cult known by its latest name GISBH. The bizarre cult produced a music video with men clad in Islamic garb singing about their late cult leader using the term skibidi. Now most people in Malaysia have heard of skibidi but have very different ideas about what it actually means.
@Katharine-00025 күн бұрын
Thankyou for that gloriously random nugget!
@TomMarvan26 күн бұрын
Fantastic discussion with a very broad coverage in just 18 minutes. Neighbours (uptalk) 11:58 and now Bluey (brekky, barbie, dunny, mate) interestingly, are having an influence on kids and how they talk, particularly in the US where the later show is very popular. Everybody: Aussie, Aussie, Aussie! Oi, oi, oi! I wonder if I can get that back into the wider lexicon. It is very heartwarming to hear that the Māori language seems to be thriving in NZed, a contrast to linguicide, and more an example linguoecology, which refers to preserving languages in danger of extinction. Perhaps our smaller world made more so by technology can help their preservation. Thank you for a great video.
@jujitsujew23Ай бұрын
These changes are a generational fad. I notice that Gen X terms are not used widely anymore because they’ve gotten older and mainstream culture has moved on from saying, “hella, gnarly, bitchin, fly, rad, etc”
@eugenefedorenko906913 күн бұрын
As for "verbing", it's really common these days, and it works with not only nouns but abbreviations or TLAs also. F.e. "Can I DIY it?" - " Can I do it myself?". Moreover, we can observe that we tend to TLA as many expressions as possible
@schweve5326 күн бұрын
Just a fun factoid: While “LOL” was first developed to denote “laughing out loud” (which it doesn’t mean anymore), the word for fun in Dutch is, in fact, “lol.” (Has been for hundreds of years.)
@hector569925 күн бұрын
What does 'LOL' mean now?
@larushka124 күн бұрын
Nope. It meant Lots of Love before laughing out loud.
@schweve5323 күн бұрын
@ I have one friend who uses it to mean “just kidding.” So, that’s my best guess.
@kezia802721 күн бұрын
LOL in the internet context has ALWAYS meant laughing out loud. Your ignorance, and ability to fabricate reality out of whole cloth is incredible.
@larushka121 күн бұрын
@ You know there was life before the internet, right? 🙄
@girrlbyker20 күн бұрын
I'm surprised Neil didn't mention the shift in British English in younger people choosing not to use present perfect when describing experiences, they use past simple instead (as in American English) so for example: Did you see the film yet? rather than Have you seen the film? Or I broke my leg rather than I've broken my leg.
@jujutrini841219 күн бұрын
I have teenagers so spend a lot of time talking to teenagers. They use both.
@CarrieV921 күн бұрын
News flash: every generation had their own jargon. But ok, you’re special
@razhosem676924 күн бұрын
English is a refined language & has an appeal worldwide.Appealing language....English is a mother of all language...
@IsaacLampart27 күн бұрын
Wow this is my first time hearing a BBC world service presentation. I'm surprised how professional this was.
@Patrice1130021 күн бұрын
I’ve noticed dramatic pronunciation shifts by younger people here in the U.S. For example, if you take the word “important”, instead of it being pronounced as written, I’m hearing it sound like “impor-ENT.” It’s a bit like a cockney pronunciation in the U.K. but here I think it has a Latino influence.
@calebcain472919 күн бұрын
What I love about Skibidi is that it's not even remotely new. In relatively recent history, "Scat Man John" sang it in 1995, but even he would say that it has been part of Jazz scat vocalization for decades before he used it. But that's the best part... It's old, but it's new, but in the new way it's being used as a thrown-in word that doesn't have a distinct meaning, which is EXACTLY how it was used in scat vocalizations in jazz for as much as 100 years.
@CerejaStudies27 күн бұрын
The Portuguese are mad because their kids are speaking Brazillian Portuguese because the kids watch too much Brazillian KZbinrs and because of that they started speaking with our accent and grammar and also the slangs. For me this is funny!
@bbclearningenglish26 күн бұрын
It's amazing how the internet has made these changes to the way people speak possible.
@beewest570423 күн бұрын
It's like in my country when kids started sounding like Dora the explorer & Peppa Pig. They are S.African. 😂😂😂
@aromaticsnail23 күн бұрын
As a Portuguese, that's simply people showing their prejudice and even racism as these people look down on Brazilians. Ignore the nonsense. These people, that speak a variant used by 10M people believe they own the language and think they can impose their variant to the other 200M speakers.
@janetmckenzie14627 күн бұрын
What disturbs me most is that Gen Z was never taught cursive. They can’t even read well-written cursive, or write it at all. They are cut off from the long history of cursive, even prosaic things like a letter from Grandma. Cursive English is basically a foreign language to Gen Z.
@edwinguerrero407326 күн бұрын
Why is it necessary though? I think that it's a shame as well, but besides writing a fancy title, I NEVER use it in my day to day life. I think that it can be helpful to teach cursive literacy to read past documents written in cursive, but I personally cannot come up with a reason to include it in our curriculums.
@Pleoryo26 күн бұрын
Cursive is antiquated like shorthand or stone carvings. Communication changes every generation as the world changes
@kiingisking25 күн бұрын
@@edwinguerrero4073gen z 😂 broken and confused generation
@clobre_25 күн бұрын
That's simply not true in many other countries. Cursive is becoming obsolete because of the Internet and handwriting in general becoming obsolete. Unless some Gen Zs need to know cursive, they won't. Disclaimer: I am part of Gen Z and was taught cursive before print.
@ellislegg393725 күн бұрын
@@Pleoryocursive is still taught in schools.
@markydh3Ай бұрын
1:19 in, literally just as the conversation started, the presenter referred to her children as kids. Now, this may be a an example of language changing from one generator the next, but my grandparents would've corrected the presenter at this point and stated the correct word would be indeed be children (with a kid being a young goat). Another point that I remember being picked up by my grandparents when they watched TV was 'bin', instead of 'been', with most media presenters these days falling foul to that. The pronunciation of the letter 'T' can be significantly lacking too.
@TinLeadHammerАй бұрын
Do you use "gay" as "happy"?
@nathanielfleku3416Ай бұрын
😂@@TinLeadHammer
@stevenmagasis481021 күн бұрын
“Wicked!” has been used as a positive exclamation in Boston for at least 60 years…
@one_fieldАй бұрын
Stop trying to make "fetch" happen!
@danielwhyatt3278Ай бұрын
“IT’S NOT GONNA HAPPEN.”😂😂
@Katharine-00025 күн бұрын
Still the best teaching moment for linguistic change 😂
@biscuitheque79Ай бұрын
Many factors here: IQ is declining, slang is spreading faster than ever before via social media, young people lacking etiquette, manners and respect, digital technology is gleaning information/young people lacking the attention spans to read books. Basically a dumbing down because of 'influencers' AKA bad influences. Disturbing that this generation behave/talk like entitled cartoon characters. Bro.
@carlito6038Ай бұрын
1. IQ is not declining. bullshit metric 2. Where is the proof that young people especially are lacking manners and respect - the internet allows everybody to lack respect and get away with it 3. Bro
@_ArsNovaАй бұрын
@@carlito6038 IQ is most definitely declining. Behavioral issues and disorders for young people are at an all time high. They no longer have the attention spans to read even short books, let alone large epics. More and more talentless "influencers" are becoming their idols. The future is looking absolutely dim for future generations.
@foobarf8766Ай бұрын
The Q in IQ is a quotient, but you can speak for yourself about it's decline🤦
@Rinzler511Ай бұрын
@@carlito6038 IQ is most definitely declining. Behavioral issues and other disorders for young people are at an all time high. They no longer have the attention spans to read even short books, let alone large epics. More and more talentless "influencers" are becoming their idols. The future is looking very dim for future generations.
@Rafterman955Ай бұрын
@@carlito6038 The level of cope here is unreal. All the things he said are true. Gen Z can't watch anything longer than a TikTok let alone read something like Ulysses or War & Peace. Behavioral issues and disorders have skyrocketed since the advent of the internet.
@AtLeastTryALittle20 күн бұрын
I'm in my mid-30s, and I've heard all of these words for several years now. I do have a theory, which is that since i was born and raised in LA, where a lot of the global culture originates from these days, i have always felt like language as fluid in this way. I guess the rest of the world is just now getting that LA experience?
@Hvc109522 күн бұрын
Prescriptivism and descriptivism argument to language is still relevant I think! Most linguists take the approach of ‘descriptivism’ (allow change) as resistance to the evolution of language (something that should be ‘prescribed’) is considered quite an old-fashioned take
@abduvosittulanov23606 күн бұрын
Hello from Uzbekistan everyone especially to Neil
@TheScreamingFrog91622 күн бұрын
All I have to say is, that's Groovy ☮
@georgecolby717321 күн бұрын
Far out, man.
@alexandermoody194625 күн бұрын
What is interesting about artificial intelligence and language is there is a broader definition structure when a meaning or value of something is defined within a framework through use in multiple languages. The diversity of languages in this context derive precision and accuracy in specific use.
@elizabethglaser139711 күн бұрын
Intonation with a drop at the end gives a vibe of demanding, direction, disdain, and disapproval. Where as the up turn at the end implies suggestion of option, possibility of negotiating, openess to suggestions or alternatives and thoughts?
@heavyhookedup25 күн бұрын
Skibadee, was a British recording artist and drum and bass MC
@Ramiarmuni22 күн бұрын
I like how Sophia pushed the word Genocide at the start of the conversation, then looked 😮, remembered that this is BBC, not Tik-Tok
@vincenzofederico893813 күн бұрын
Very interesting. Here in Italy the young people when talking of videogames use a language where the english words that are shown on they display (like "kill" or "shop" or "skin") are used and even verbalised as italian words, so you have "shoppare" or "killare" (italian infinite verbs ending in -are are the most common ones)
@michaellanoue915623 күн бұрын
I remember when hot was so wonderful became cool to another generation and then changed into bitchin, before morphing into righteous. Each generation does this. What’s so fascinating is how social media has hastened this trend.
@ak-sher27 күн бұрын
it happened 2000 years ago, it happened 5000 years ago it happened after 19th century and 20th century. it will happen again. For anyone is concerned, your language would exist in some form, but the meanings of words would change, in some cases completely, taking over some different meaning completely.
@everysingleone871424 күн бұрын
My first babysitter gave me all her 45’s and one had a George Jetson song where the teenage daughter started by saying, about the crooner, “He’s the living end!” My favourite slang: Zappa’s daughter imitations in “Valley Girl”. “That is sooooo grody!”
@thushariperera318226 күн бұрын
Very interesting. Thank you
@eugenefedorenko906913 күн бұрын
I feel the English language has an extremely high level of linguoplasticity. And its feature makes it fairly applicable when it comes to expressing your feelings and thoughts. We know that a language is the mirror of a culture, and in the case of English it's a mirror of the modern world
@infographie12 күн бұрын
Excellent, thanks for posting, that's really interesting and useful.
@bowievanling801023 күн бұрын
upspeak used in a sentence without a question being asked is generally off putting to me, not pulling me into the content.
@arctic_haze21 күн бұрын
Using nouns as verbs was always something the English language had an ease of doing and it was always happening to some new nouns. We notice that only when a new one is turned into a verb.
@rescuecomplex511525 күн бұрын
Language evolves mixing foreign words, technical words and regionalisms.
@eunyog29 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for these interesting videos with latest trends. I learn a lot from your Channel: English, news...
@sorchamusicАй бұрын
“Skibidi” is a secret language nonsense word similar to saying “hip” in the 70s or “radical” in the 80s or “gnarly”in the 90s. Older generations were befuddled by these expressions then and that was the point.
@bbclearningenglish26 күн бұрын
Hi Sorcha. This is a good point. Every generation has its own vocabulary for excluding older people!
@darussianping6124 күн бұрын
As a foreigner living in the uk with czech heritage i can confirm this is happening also abroad as well. I understand them because i speak english. Also having older kids helps. Skibidi is used by my 7 yo 😂
@RSJ194720 күн бұрын
The homogenisation aspect of the evolving slang is what makes me sad. Soon we will lack variety when kids in Europe, Africa, India.. everywhere use same expressions/slang. It makes travelling easier and boring at the same time.
@ranjittyagi935420 күн бұрын
Just like those malls that look the same across nations. Or skyscrapers and such...
@DavidEsp123 күн бұрын
Cultural psychology can also play a part. A French friend, who teaches both French and English, observed that people (in general) of Latin culture are "scared of dead air", meaning silences, vacuums. To avoid this "at all costs", a variety of (reflex) intentionally verbose expression options and filler-words are employed. It is as if, she explained, silences are to be _feared_ because they provide spaces for the mind to think, and worse still, think independently, maybe even express such thoughts, risking tribal exclusion.
@RingoRocket-h1dАй бұрын
I used the word "keystroke" at work and no one knew what it meant.
@henrietta9206Ай бұрын
dovetail, bandwidth horrible pretentiousness.
@thenightporter26 күн бұрын
Are you typing this from 1972, because I remember having "computer hour" with an Apple and learning the word "keystroke," and that was 1980
@kezia802721 күн бұрын
@@BrockSamson-i1i Being confused by people using outdated terminology isn't age discrimination 🤦♀🤦♀🤦♀ Talk about a persecution complex
@henrietta920611 күн бұрын
@@kezia8027 true that, preach! loved the term "persecution complex" !!
@m.walker269320 күн бұрын
On the "nouns being used as adjectives" part - I think that might in be influenced by non-english speakers that are from language families where you can more easily create verbs from nouns. English is used all over the world, but with different native language backgrounds, the set of rules that people do actually apply in regards to their usage of language needn't necessarily follow those that english natives grew up with.
@aufi_versatile27 күн бұрын
It's giving BBC world service
@themorninsttar23 күн бұрын
Social media is a disease. This comment will make so much sense in few years.
@kezia802721 күн бұрын
lmao in a few years you'll be 20 years late to the conversation...
@LathropLdST20 күн бұрын
You are writing incorrectly while pretending to correct. The donkey correcting the mule...
@markzanetti622821 күн бұрын
young people often misspeak and struggle to communicate with one another. listen in on a conversation and notice how often they need to repeat and adjust and clarify their words just to carry on a conversation... (true of other age groups too of course)
@annelancaster820323 күн бұрын
If your teenagers ever do something really bad, change the WiFi password and insist they watch this entire video with you before you switch it back on.
@emileigh6524Ай бұрын
90% of the words are AAVE for them to be linguistics and not know that is baffling.
@heyerikan28 күн бұрын
💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯
@CinnastixChick25 күн бұрын
Came on here to say this but I'm glad someone beat me to it. I understand gen z just fine because 90% of the words are words I've been hearing my whole life. Just a little weird that when they use these words, they don't use the right sentence structure. Admittedly, skibidi is entirely unique. I'll give them that.
@tabby7324 күн бұрын
Sorry to be dumb but what does AAVE stand for?
@AmanCreatesArt24 күн бұрын
They start discussing this in the “Where does this new vocabulary come froM? Section of the video about 7 minutes in.
@Ellie-nz2wk23 күн бұрын
@@tabby73African American Vernacular English i guess
@agatabasinska4828Ай бұрын
Have you noticed a lot of people use second verb form instead of the third one in Present Perfect. I’ve heard it so many times in different podcasts
@bbclearningenglish26 күн бұрын
That's a good observation, Agata. There is a lot of variation in non-standard forms of language.
@aydogank4525 күн бұрын
This! I think it's much easier, add an -ed suffix or completely ditch the tense instead of thinking for verbs, forms, conjugations etc. Also German with these is a mess.
@handyvickers12 күн бұрын
It's OK for a language to 'evolve' over time, but I'm hoping it's not an excuse to not teach the language correctly, which includes grammar, etc etc etc. I'm horrified when I find people who have no clue about verbs, tenses, nouns, etc etc etc. Then they write, "could of", or "I have went", or "it's more worse", without understanding why it's poor English. And this is sometimes people who read quite a lot....
@vanessacorey20026 күн бұрын
I was surprised to hear a seemingly polished interviewer ask about 'the change to PRONOUNCIATION', ....providing an example of what she was asking about. The utterance 'pronounciation' is a combination of the verb 'pronounce' and the noun 'pronunciation' that so many people seem to be using these days. As for the rise of verbINGs, activities quite naturally and very easily lead to coining verbs and verbings [gerunds].
@maikibordercollie15 күн бұрын
I thought it was just a Kiwi way of pronouncing pronunciation. Several of my New Zealander friends say it like that.
@vanessacorey20013 күн бұрын
@@maikibordercollie I work in the combined areas of linguistics, communications, and public speaking. When I ask many people around the world why they say 'pronounciation' they usually say they thought that it was the correct English word. They are often unaware that there are two similar words and that they have combined 'pronounce' the verb with 'pronunciation' the noun. As one who travels extensively and deals with people in various fields, I never heard this Frankensteined word until the blooming of the public internet and global communications. WAIT...hold the phone....are you saying we have the Kiwis's to blame? Hah...I've got a bone to pick then with a few Kiwi friends.....
@maikibordercollie12 күн бұрын
@@vanessacorey200 Haha, you're probably right that no particular nationality is to blame and that it's just people's misunderstanding of how it should be pronounced. Now that you mention it, I can remember kids pronouncing it that way when I was in school .... and that's half a century ago! As a long-time teacher of languages and linguistics (English, French, German, Spanish.....) I've certainly observed what you describe. I've put it down partly to the fact that people don't read as much nowadays (and therefore may never have seen the word pronunciation in print.) Let's see if your Kiwi friends can defend the honour of their nation's pronunciation, LOL.
@prideofdurham477618 күн бұрын
We were taught at school "Never start a sentence with and , but , so or because". It makes me angry when contestants on game shows are asked what they do and they reply with "So , I......." and that really annoying mid-sentence "......and yes....."
@Siphr0dias9 күн бұрын
Embracing the change. Not only for language is this a smart decision/ way.
@dazwischen507221 күн бұрын
This was very interesting for me as a swede living in Germany! Actually. My lovely AI Programm has really helped me improve my German! And instead of paying other people 20 € or 30 € an hour to correct or write texts for me ( for work) , I know pay my AI programm 35 € a month and I get A LOT MORE DONE!! Love it! 😻
@Kira_Martel21 күн бұрын
I'm 35 and this hurts even me. What a weird and stilted way to look at language. Like they give some lip service to around the halfway mark, most of this isn't "Gen Z" slang at all, it's older African American Vernacular English that has been popularized through the internet and post-hoc attributed to the younger generations. "Skibidi" is just a scat term popularized through a viral animation. Would they be as confused by the linguistic positions any of the other scat syllables used by folks like Ella Fitzgerald and Nina Simone? How can they talk about language and etymology with no sense of lineage and provenance? They seem confused by the pronunciation of "lol" as if they don't know the difference between an acronym and an initialism. 20 years ago we were talking about how "verbing weirds language." There's nothing new under the sun.
@elisabeth_ntt390427 күн бұрын
Neil… his my favorite
@mi22im22 күн бұрын
Gen Z’s slangs go global with the help of social media but if you come think about it, this is nothing new, each generation has its own special slangs.
@s8ulfanclubofficial3325 күн бұрын
A nation India 🇮🇳 has so many languages and its a common saying that if other can understand what you speak you had done your job , thus I see these words are getting adopted bcz their peers can understand it
@BeWater201922 күн бұрын
I actually paused this, went into my teenage son's room, and asked what rizz means. He looked at me in some disdain (in that I am trying to ask him about pop culture of today) (that much has not changed over the years, as I understand it), said impatiently, "game, it means game, as in 'He's got rizz'!"
@GibranCamus-kr2dc21 күн бұрын
7:22 glad they brought this up. we been saying this stuff since at least 5 decades ago.
@jomamacallinyou24 күн бұрын
It's not just words. Being exclusive is the twist. People adopt the culturally exclusive norm to become completely inclusive. It's about behavior and the importance of fearing rejection.
@yogikarl21 күн бұрын
Linguist : language may be the only true democratic element in society .
@8bit_paul25 күн бұрын
0:43-0:53 random digital zoom-ins are having an impact too, making us feel like we have no control over what we're watching and making us feel closer to people than we really are. EDIT: and in this case we're zooming in to an area above her head for the first seven seconds, feels like there's something important up there.