Introduction: Welcome to the Era of Digital Chaos
Language has officially broken the rules — and Gen Alpha couldn’t be prouder.
In 2025, words aren’t just words anymore. They’re memes, moods, and movements, shaped by TikTok trends, Discord humor, and chaotic group chats. Forget traditional grammar; today’s youth communicate in numbers, sounds, and half-sentences that somehow make perfect sense to everyone under 20.
If you’ve ever seen a comment section filled with “67,” “rizzless,” or “delulu,” and thought, “Did I miss an update to English?” — this guide is for you.
Here’s your definitive Gen Alpha slang dictionary for 2025, decoding the viral words, phrases, and inside jokes taking over the internet.
1. ‘67’ – The Number That Means Everything and Nothing
Let’s start with the reigning king of chaos. ‘67’, recently crowned Dictionary.com’s Word of the Year 2025, isn’t a typo or jersey number — it’s a vibe.
Pronounced “six-seven,” it’s used when something feels weird, confusing, or absurdly funny. Imagine your friend says, “He texted his ex again.” The only proper response? “67.”
It started as a meme linked to a TikTok song and spiraled into cultural shorthand for collective nonsense — proof that language no longer needs logic to thrive.
Read This: ‘67’ Becomes Dictionary.com’s Word of the Year 2025
2. “Delulu” – When Optimism Meets Denial
Short for “delusional,” delulu is the ultimate Gen Alpha coping mechanism. It’s not an insult; it’s a lifestyle.
Got a crush who hasn’t texted back in three months? You’re not sad — you’re delulu. Manifesting your dream job despite zero qualifications? Also delulu.
To Gen Alpha, being delusional is empowering. It’s the art of believing in your own main-character storyline, even when reality disagrees.
“Stay delulu, it’s the solulu.” (Translation: Stay delusional; that’s the solution.)
3. “Rizzless” – The Newest Insult in the Internet Lexicon
If “rizz” (short for charisma) was the buzzword of 2024, 2025 is all about being rizzless.
It’s a playful way to say someone has absolutely no game, no charm, and no clue how to flirt. Think of it as Gen Alpha’s version of “socially awkward” — but with memes.
Example: “He asked if I like Wi-Fi routers. He’s so rizzless.”
4. “Skibidi” – The Meme That Refuses to Die
What started as a bizarre YouTube animation trend has now become linguistic chaos. “Skibidi” isn’t just a word — it’s an energy.
Used as a random exclamation, greeting, or emotional sound effect, skibidi can mean anything from “hi” to “I’m losing my mind.”
It’s Gen Alpha’s way of saying: “We’re post-language now.”
5. “Gyatt” – Compliment or Chaos? You Decide.
If you’ve spent more than five minutes on TikTok, you’ve seen “GYATT!” screamed in all caps.
It’s an exaggerated reaction to someone’s appearance — mostly humorous, sometimes cringey. Though originally short for “Goddamn,” Gen Alpha rebranded it into a satirical exclamation of admiration.
In 2025, gyatt isn’t about being serious. It’s about being dramatic.
6. “Fanum Tax” – When Your Friend Takes Your Food
Derived from streamer Fanum, this slang describes when someone takes your stuff — usually food — without asking.
Example: “Bro just Fanum taxed my fries.”
It’s now evolved to describe any form of low-level theft or borrowing: stealing your charger, your playlist, or your favorite slang term.
7. “Sigma” – From Meme to Movement
Once a masculine self-improvement meme, Sigma has taken on new life in 2025.
Gen Alpha now uses Sigma ironically to describe anyone acting overly dramatic or self-serious. If your friend posts a deep quote after getting ignored once — he’s a Sigma.
It’s mock philosophy meets internet theater.
8. “Goob” – The New Soft Insult
Forget “goofy.” The modern insult is goob.
It’s a gentler way of saying someone’s being a clown, but with affection. Example: “You forgot your keys again, you little goob.”
It’s endearing, slightly mocking, and quintessentially Gen Alpha — the line between cringe and cute has never been thinner.
9. “Cooked” – When You’re Done, Over, or Emotionally Toasted
Feeling mentally exhausted? Socially fried? You’re cooked.
Used to describe burnout, embarrassment, or defeat, cooked captures that universal Gen Alpha vibe of “I can’t do this anymore, but it’s fine.”
Example: “Three exams, no sleep, two breakdowns — I’m cooked.”
10. “Blorbo” – The Fictional Character You’re Emotionally Attached To
Borrowed from Tumblr culture, blorbo describes a fictional character you love irrationally.
It’s not just a crush — it’s a parasocial relationship. When Gen Alpha says, “That’s my blorbo,” they mean it spiritually.
11. “Glazing” – When Compliments Go Too Far
Glazing refers to excessive admiration — especially online.
Example: “Stop glazing him, he just posted a mirror selfie.”
It’s a critique of parasocial fandom and influencer obsession, wrapped in Gen Alpha humor.
12. “Ohio Moment” – Embracing the Absurd
No one knows how or why Ohio became a meme, but “Ohio Moment” now means anything unhinged, cursed, or inexplicably strange.
Example: “My teacher brought a ferret to class — total Ohio moment.”
It’s irony distilled into geography.
13. “Corecore” – The Aesthetic of Everything and Nothing
Coined from the suffix “-core,” this term defines emotionally layered meme edits that mix chaos, nostalgia, and melancholy.
It’s part performance art, part existential crisis — the TikTok equivalent of saying, “Life is absurd, but aesthetic.”
14. “NPC Energy” – When Someone Acts Like a Background Character
Straight from gaming culture, NPC Energy describes people who move through life on autopilot — awkward, predictable, and hilariously unaware.
Example: “He waved at a mannequin. NPC behavior.”
It’s Gen Alpha’s way of teasing without cruelty — a modern roast for modern times.
15. “Brainrot” – The Ultimate Internet Diagnosis
If your entire vocabulary comes from memes, congratulations — you’ve got brainrot.
It’s self-aware, funny, and deeply relatable. Gen Alpha wears it like a badge of honor: “Yeah, I’ve got brainrot. I’ve seen the Skibidi toilet video 300 times.”
It’s not an insult; it’s a statement of belonging in the age of endless scrolling.
Final Thoughts: The New Language of Chaos
From ‘67’ to ‘brainrot’, Gen Alpha’s slang reveals a generation fluent in irony, emotion, and absurdity — all at once. Their words aren’t random; they’re reflections of an era defined by constant connection, meme culture, and collective humor.
As traditional dictionaries scramble to keep up, one truth is clear:
The next generation isn’t killing language — they’re reinventing it, one chaotic inside joke at a time.



