Science, music, medicine, technology, athletic performance, resistance to disease: The continuing evolution of people reveals itself in many ways.
Our evolution also appears in our language, which remains fluid with ensuing generations.
Born and influenced distinctly during the digital age, Gen Alpha (2011–2025) sees and will see the world through AI, chatbots, social media, memes, gaming, streaming, algorithms, and virtual reality. They also build on expressions and concepts instilled by their Gen Z predecessors (born 1997–2010).
Those of Gen Alpha aren’t merely the successors of Gen Z. Almost from the start, they have grown up with subjective truth, AI dominance, and ubiquitous tracking of personal data.
Their language reflects their recognition of where those factors are leading us. Through it, they indicate a desire for privacy, a skepticism of the digital, and a deep appreciation for the physical and the logical.
Rather than aim for literal precision, Gen A slang can often appear more ironic, playful, or meme-based. Many of the new terms convey self-expression, humor, digital culture, confidence, and social dynamics.
Perhaps most notably, beyond being affixed to Gen A’s daily living, their phones give them instant access to information and people worldwide. This creates new slang in real time.
The following review of current Gen Alpha slang adds to our exploration begun in 2025. As with that earlier list, it gives us insight into how our younger people interpret the era they occupy.
Note that some Gen Alpha slang can change so quickly it might last just a short time before becoming “cringe” (embarrassing) or outdated.
| Term | Meaning |
| 6-7 | used whenever the numbers 6-7 appear next to each other; accompanied with a hand gesture in which hands are moved up and down as if weighing two options |
| aura farming | trying to casually look cool |
| brain rot | meaningless content without substance |
| chopped | ugly |
| cooked | done for, doomed, exhausted |
| cortisol-coded | stressful-looking aesthetic or environment |
| crash out | to have a tantrum, get angry |
| glaze/glazing | to praise someone excessively in an annoying, insincere way |
| glitch-walking | moving awkwardly like a lagging video-game character |
| lore-dumping | explaining one’s whole backstory at once |
| low-cortisol | relaxed |
| high-cortisol | stressed |
| low-key | quietly, secretly; subtle, having understated emphasis |
| high-key | obvious, prolific, emphasized, not subtle |
| -maxxing | something done with great visibility; used as an unhyphenated suffix that can attach to any word |
| mog | to be outshined in looks, style, fitness, or overall presence |
| NPC | nonplayable character; acting robotic, unoriginal, or led by trend |
| opp | shorthand for opposition or opponent; someone not trustworthy |
| rage bait | purposely provoking outrage to get a desired response or reaction |
| side quest | random unnecessary activity |
| slop | second-rate product or effort (can also be an indirect jab at AI) |
| unc | someone seen as old, outdated, or out of touch |
Examples
Did you see the pic Vicki posted of her on vacay? She’s so aura farming.
That reel is brain rot, bruh.
Matt said Nate crashed out when he wasn’t invited.
After Christine finished lore-dumping, we finally figured out why she couldn’t go.
Gianna went shopping yesterday, so she’ll prob be lookmaxxing all week.
I wouldn’t share too much with Caleb. I think he might be an opp.
Samantha said she’s taking a break from her feed—too much rage bait.
Tristan means well, but the party looks like it was planned by an unc.
Expressions such as these build on those that have preceded them, including:
| bet | agreement: “for sure,” “I’m in” |
| bop | having a loose or promiscuous reputation; can also mean a good song |
| bruh | bro, brother, dude (with an inflection of annoyance, as in “come on”) |
| cringe | not flattering; embarrassing, including vicariously |
| fire | really cool or impressive |
| mewing | to work on strengthening the jawline, such as by putting the tongue to the roof of the mouth so the jaw looks better |
| salty | bitter, resentful, irritated |
| sigma | popular, dominant, self-sufficient person |
| sus | suspicious |
Gen A Slang Explained
Teen slang has always been ready to shift as it develops, as well as poised to separate from previous generations.
As alluded to, Gen Alpha slang’s pace of change in the late 2020s is faster than ever because of current technology’s speed. Platforms such as TikTok, Instagram, and X have made new slang a dynamic, living entity that can be made or faded overnight.
Today’s youth slang represents the factors in their daily lives, such as:
short-form video platforms (biggest source)
gaming culture
AI tools and algorithmic content feeds
meme ecosystems and absurdist humor
peer-to-peer remix culture (slang changed among groups)
lingering Gen Z internet slang
We also can infer Gen A skepticism in an expression such as “that’s AI.” If someone explains something in a way that seems too perfect, the response can be “that’s AI,” meaning it feels fake, uninspired, or not trustworthy.
Gen Z’s and Gen Alpha’s succession creates some slang overlap. The difference lies in where the slang comes from, how it moves among young people and how the slang operates once it spreads.
Where Gen Z slang still has roots in internet culture, texting, and social media, Gen Alpha slang has increased origins in algorithms and short-form videos.
| Gen A | Gen Z | |
| Slang source | Algorithm, video | Text, internet |
| TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Roblox | Twitter/X, Tumblr, Snapchat | |
| Lead element | Video, audio, online images | Texting, video, audio |
| Early forms | Sound clips, memes, gestures | Written jokes, captions, memes |
| Examples | aura, sigma, mewing | LOL, FOMO, flex |
| Gen A | Gen Z | |
| Speed of change | Days or weeks | Months or years |
| Examples | fanum tax, skibidi, sigma | lit, ghosting, rizz (still used by Gen A) |
| Gen A | Gen Z | |
| Tone | Less literal, more “vibe”-based | Clear meaning |
| Purpose | Humor, chaos, reaction | Expression, identity |
| Example | skibidi | that’s cap (that’s a lie) |
| Gen A | Gen Z | |
| Gaming influence | Dominant | Influential but not dominant |
| Context | Shaped by algorithms, AI, remixes | Shaped by human posting communities |
| Example | NPC, glitch-walking | buff, newb |
Let’s test your facility with Gen Alpha slang. Choose the correct word in each sentence.
1. I didn’t want to say it, but that haircut is [chopped / cooked].
2. Tammi can’t work there. It’s too [cringe / fire] for her.
3. If Danielle keeps [glitch-walking / crashing out] in her posts, she’s going to lose followers.
4. Jameson has been [mogging / bragmaxxing] about his new Nike Air Jordans all day.
5. This [high-key / high-cortisol] assignment is driving Francisco insane.
1. chopped
2. cringe
3. crashing out
4. bragmaxxing
5. high-cortisol
If the article or the existing discussions do not address a thought or question you have on the subject, please use the "Comment" box at the bottom of this page.