| Title: | The Joy of Lex | 
| Notice: | A Notes File even your grammar could love | 
| Moderator: | THEBAY::SYSTEM | 
| Created: | Fri Feb 28 1986 | 
| Last Modified: | Mon Jun 02 1997 | 
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 | 
| Number of topics: | 1192 | 
| Total number of notes: | 42769 | 
    The local paper ran an article yesterday that defined the current
    teen age slang.  Have times ever changed since I was in High School
    when the girl I dated was "Boss" and the car I drove was "Cherry".
    Here is a short dictionary of the latest idioms.
    
    molded		idiotic		"Don't you feel MOLDED?"
    clowned		laughed at	"I'm always getting CLOWNED."
    bogus		stupid		"How BOGUS!"
    capping		light put down	"He's always CAPPING me."
    tripping		in a bad mood	"Don't talk to him, he's TRIPPING."
    tweak		messy/unruly	"Her hair TWEAKED today."
    hella		hell of a lot	"We has a HELLA homework today."
    shake		to get rid of	"Let's SHAKE these guys."
    buff		heavily muscled	"He is so BUFF!"
    playing		cheating	"He's PLAYING on his girlfriend."
    swoop		flirt		"I'm going to SWOOP on that
    					 girl"
    scope		survey		"We wanted to SCOPE the scene."
    scam		look for boys/girls
    					"I want to SCAM tonight."
    pud			jerk		"They're such PUDS."
    stoked		happy		"I'm so STOKED today!"
    throw the dogs	fight		"Do you want to THROW THE DOGS?"
    beat		music		"Lets go hear some BEAT."
    scantless		ugly or wierd	"He's dressed all SCANTLESS."
    tough		nice		"That's a really TOUGH jacket."
    fresh		great		"Her sweater is FRESH."
    later days		good-bye	"LATER DAYS!"
    jet			to go		"Let's JET out of here."
    squid		freshmen	"SQUIDS don't know anything."
    
    Larry
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 163.1 | Gag me with a spoon! Like, totally barfulous.. | 11550::BLINN | Dr. Tom | Tue Mar 25 1986 16:30 | 0 | 
| 163.2 | The in-between age. | APTECH::RSTONE | Wed Mar 26 1986 08:40 | 4 | |
|     "Since teenagers are too old for childish things and too young for
    adult things, they compensate by doing things no one else does."
    
                                 - Author unknown.
 | |||||
| 163.3 | The in-between age. | SIERRA::OSMAN | and silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feep | Wed Mar 26 1986 17:52 | 5 | 
|         "Since children are too young for adolescent things and too young for
    adult things, they compensate by doing things no one else does."
    
                                 - Author unknown.
 | |||||
| 163.4 | The in-between age. | SIERRA::OSMAN | and silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feep | Wed Mar 26 1986 17:53 | 6 | 
|             "Since adults are too old for adolescent things and too old for
    childish things, they compensate by doing things no one else does."
    
                                 - Author unknown.
 | |||||
| 163.5 | GermanTeens take Note | CANYON::MOELLER | Fri Mar 28 1986 14:21 | 6 | |
|     I asked my wife, who is German born, but a nice lady, how to say
    'Like Totally Gag Me With a Spoon!' and her reply was, 'Zum Kotzen'
    (It Is To Vomit). How succinct.
    
    Karl
    
 | |||||
| 163.6 | ERIS::CALLAS | Jon Callas | Mon Mar 31 1986 13:27 | 3 | |
|     " 'It was hell!' recalls former child."
    
    	-- Thurber
 | |||||
| 163.7 | No comment | STAR::SZETO | Simon Szeto | Sat Apr 05 1986 22:45 | 5 | 
|     What?  Is 'tough' back?  When I was in college in the early '60's
    a "tough chick" was an attractive coed.
    
  --Simon
    
 | |||||
| 163.8 | RE:0 | VAXINE::PITARD | Back from the other side...... | Wed Dec 31 1986 01:37 | 13 | 
|     RE:0
    
    	Sorry Larry, But being as young as I am, and also working
    	with teenagers, some of the paper's `slang' expression was 
    	wrong.
    
    	swoop should be scoop,
    	music is refered to as tunes,
    	clowned should be razed (pronounced RA-zzed)
    	a fight is refered to as a blow-out
    
    
    	Jay_who_just_graduated_in_June_of_1986.
 | |||||
| 163.9 | Slang dialects | 4GL::DIAMOND | Dave Diamond, DTN 381-2687 | Wed Jan 07 1987 14:34 | 9 | 
|     RE: .-1
    
        Of course, there is such a thing as dialect variation.  My
    	sister comes home from Pennsylvania every trimester with an
    	entirely different language!
    
    	Language is rarely WRONG, just DIFFERENT.
    
    Dave
 | |||||