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  1. Mar 1, 2024 · 2. Duh. This slang term is used to express that something is extremely obvious or self-evident. It is often used in a playful or mocking manner. For instance, if someone states the obvious, another person might respond with “Duh!”. In a conversation about a well-known fact, one might say, “Duh, everyone knows that.”.

    • Bet. Bet is used as a way to confirm or agree with something. Consider it a synonym for okay or sounds good. —Can you pick up Joshua in an hour? —Bet, I’ll be there.
    • Boujee. Boujee (also spelled bougie) is mostly used as an adjective describing something extravagant, luxurious, or of high-class taste. Boujee can also describe a person who is materialistic, pretentious, or who prioritizes an upscale lifestyle.
    • Curve. To curve someone is to dismiss someone’s flirtatious advances or expressions of interest. In other words, if someone is flirting with you, and you tell them you have a boyfriend or girlfriend, you’ve curved them.
    • DMs. DM is an abbreviation for direct message. It refers to a private message sent via a social media platform like Facebook or X (formerly known as Twitter).
  2. May 23, 2022 · Do you hear about slang words, but can't really figure them out enough to recognize them? No worries: Browse this list of slang examples and get better acquainted. Dictionary

    • admin@yourdictionary.com
    • Staff Writer
    • The Characteristics of Slang
    • The Language of Outsiders
    • Standing Out and Fitting in
    • Modern Slang in London
    • Old Slang: Grub, Mob, Knock Off, and Clear as Mud
    • The Life Span of Slang Words
    • Slanguage
    • Can O' Beans on Sloppy Slang
    • The Lighter Side of American Slang

    "The most significant characteristic of slang overlaps with a defining characteristic of jargon: slang is a marker of in-group solidarity, and so it is a correlate of human groups with shared exper...

    "Slang serves the outs as a weapon against the ins. To use slang is to deny allegiance to the existing order, either jokingly or in earnest, by refusing even the words which represent conventions a...
    "The downtrodden are the great creators of slang. . . . Slang is . . . a pile of fossilized jokes and puns and ironies, tinselly gems dulled eventually by overmuch handling, but gleaming still when...
    "It is not clear to what extent the slangimpulse to enliven speech, the impulse to stand out, mingles with the slang impulse toward social intimacy, the impulse to fit in. At times they seem like o...
    "All of us, young and old, Black and white, urban and suburban have slang, and, with your eyes closed, we can tell Black guys chillaxin' with their buddies from young soccer moms dishing out about...
    "Your mother reads and reads and reads, she wants English, as much as she can get her hands on . . .. I'd come late Friday afternoon, it used to be that I would go home with a magazine or two and m...
    "I love modern slang. It's as colorful, clever, and disguised from outsiders as slang ever was and is supposed to be. Take bare, for example, one of a number of slang terms recently banned by a Lon...
    "The other banned words are equally interesting. Extra, for example, mischievously stresses the superfluous in its conventional definition, as in 'reading the whole book is extra, innit?' And that...
    "And who would not admire rinsed for something worn out or overused--chirpsing for flirting, bennin for doubled-up with laughter, or wi-five for an electronically delivered high-five? My bad, being...
    "Mouse potato for those who spend too much time on PCs is as striking as salmon and aisle salmon for people who will insist on going against the flow in crowds or supermarket aisles. Manstanding is...

    "When we refer . . . to food as 'grub,' it is perhaps hard to realize that the word goes back to Oliver Cromwell's time; from early 18th century come 'mob,' and also 'knock off,' to finish; and fro...

    "With the exception of cool, which retains its effectiveness after well over half a century, slang words--groovy, phat, radical, smokin'--have a very brief life span in which they can be used to ex...
    "The latest slang term for defecation, however, is dropping the kids off at the pool, which offers hope for a new generation of euphemistic suburbanites." (William Safire, "Kiduage." The New York T...

    "The expression slanguage has been in the English language for well over a hundred years and has an entry in reputable dictionaries like the Macquarie and the Oxford. One of its first written appea...

    "Well,' said Can o' Beans, a bit hesitantly, 'imprecise speech is one of the major causes of mental illness in human beings.' . . .
    "The inability to correctly perceive reality is often responsible for humans' insane behavior. And every time they substitute an all-purpose, sloppy slangword for the words that would accurately de...
    "Slang possesses an economy, an immediacy that's attractive, all right, but it devalues experience by standardizing and fuzzing it. It hangs between humanity and the real world like a . . . a veil....

    "I know only two words of American slang: 'swell' and 'lousy.' I think 'swell' is lousy, but 'lousy' is swell." (J.B. Priestley)

    • Richard Nordquist
  3. Aug 9, 2023 · Meaning: To steal; or a state of disrepair; or a police station. Origin: Possibly derived from Old English “hnecan” meaning to slay or take someone’s life. Usage: “Someone nicked my bike.” or “My phone’s in the nick.” or “He’s down at the nick.”.

  4. Synonyms for OBVIOUSLY: clearly, visibly, evidently, distinctly, apparently, manifestly, seemingly, patently; Antonyms of OBVIOUSLY: secretly, privately, furtively ...

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  6. 3 meanings: 1. in a way that is easy to see or understand; evidently 2. without subtlety 3. it is obvious that; clearly.... Click for more definitions.