The First Meaning of ‘Crush’ Came Long Before a ‘First Crush’
Rather, a crush is a way to take up space, and to make something about yourself known to the world.
Rachel Monroe • Savage Appetites: Four True Stories of Women, Crime, and Obsession
But then again, she said, few could have predicted the endurance of the slang word “cool” as a marker for all things generally good or fashionable. Researchers say it emerged nearly a century ago in the 1930s jazz scene, retreated from time to time over the decades, but kept coming back.
Melina Delkic • Leg Booty? Panoramic? Seggs? How TikTok Is Changing Language
Ben Percifield added
Before 1800, there wasn’t even a word for loneliness as we know it today. The word “lonely” described the state of being alone, rather than the exquisite pain of it.
Marisa G. Franco, PhD • Platonic: How Understanding Your Attachment Style Can Help You Make and Keep Friends
Chi Luu • The Unspeakable Linguistics of Camp - JSTOR Daily
Jedric Viera added
Words have always changed meaning, and the internet has only accelerated this process.
James Greig • Love bombing, gaslighting, and the problem with pathologising dating talk
Ben Percifield added
Jonquilyn Hill • Why do we say “like,” like, all the time?
The term “girl” came into popular usage in England in the 1880s to describe working-class unmarried women who occupied an emerging social space between childhood and adulthood. Not quite a child, she was childlike in that she had yet to become a wife or mother, the type of modern urbanite who engaged in “frivolous” pursuits like consumption, leisur
... See moreAshley Mears • Very Important People: Status and Beauty in the Global Party Circuit
Anne Helen Petersen • "I Resonate With That" [NAILS ON CHALKBOARD]
Britt Gage added