- Trina Nguyen is a teacher at Spring Branch High School in Houston, Texas.
- She frequently shares updates about her online classroom.
- Recently, his students revealed the slang words that were no longer in fashion.
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Eighth graders shared the slang words that no longer exist and detailed the phrases that made Generation Z disappear.
Trina NguyenA middle school teacher at Spring Branch Middle School in Houston, Texas, she frequently shares updates about her class on her TikTok account, where she has amassed more than 16,800 followers.
Recently, the eighth-grade teacher took to the video-sharing platform to share what her students thought about words like “cringe” and “yolo” that once took over their vocabulary.
In a viral video, which has so far racked up more than 6.1 million views, he revealed how his students responded when he asked them what “sayings were in and out.”
Eighth graders shared the slang words that no longer exist and detailed the phrases that made Generation Z phase out.
Trina Nguyen, a middle school teacher at Spring Branch Middle School in Houston, Texas, frequently shares updates about her classroom on her TikTok account.
She captioned the clip: “Ins and outs sayings with my 8th graders.”
First, he began by asking his students if the words “discreet” and “elevated” were still part of their vocabulary. The eighth graders revealed that they were indeed still using those words.
He then asked about the word “sus,” short for suspect.
The phrase was met with a roar of boos when students said they had replaced the word ‘their’ with the phrase ‘that’s weird.’ In addition to ‘sus’, students said they no longer used ‘cap’.
Then, Trina mentioned the word ‘yolo’, which is short for “you only live once.”
“This is like my time,” he said. After receiving boos, the students told Trina that “do it for the plot” had replaced “yolo.”
And they explained that they no longer used the word “on” to describe their excitement or something cool and instead used “that’s fire.”
People of all ages flooded the comments section and expressed their surprise at not being able to hide their laughter.
Meanwhile, the students were left confused when Trina asked them if they used the word “tell me” to describe someone’s appearance.
‘You say ‘she’s a 10’, they said in unison.
The eighth graders also noticed that they were still saying the words “beef,” which described tension between two people; ‘ick’, which is a detour; and “no shadow,” meaning you didn’t have any problems with anyone.
They also mentioned “period”, a term of agreement.
Finally, Trina’s students explained that the word “cringe,” which was used as another term for “weird,” had been replaced by “weird,” and that the word “kill,” which was used as a compliment, had been replaced. been eliminated by ‘you ate that.’
People of all ages flooded the comments section and expressed their surprise at not being able to hide their laughter.
One person said: ‘I’m so old that cheesy is back. I’ve used it forever hahaha.’
Someone else wrote: “The ‘eh’ after saying ‘tell me’ was really funny.”
Another user added: “Going back to the original versions of things is hilarious.”
A fourth commented: “Love this.”