Six-seven, and other bullshit Gen Z slang that's hurting them more than us

SIX-SEVEN is what the kids are saying, and you’re supposed to care. But does the new generation’s race for fresh online slang just make them easier to ignore? Let’s assess: 

‘Ate’

To do something well, as in ‘ate and left no crumbs’. ‘Ate’ on its own is a pretty dull word, so it’s unlikely to catch on. Give it no further thought and leave youngsters to become as socially irrelevant at the tender age of 14 as someone saying ‘Talk to the hand!’ today.

‘Six-seven’

Making up meaningless words to annoy people is the act of a twat. When a teen uses this, reply to subsequent questions with your own gibberish. Meet ‘Can you give me a lift to Emma’s?’ with ‘Klaatu barada nikto’ and see if they think that’s f**king funny.

‘Chopped’

Meaning ‘ugly’. A gratuitous substitution. If Gen Alpha and Z continue like this they’ll ultimately become incomprehensible even to each other, leaving them all wandering around aimlessly, unable to organise simple things like getting pissed in the park because it comes out as: ‘Fish manga cubit swindle lathe ocelot, Josh?’

‘Mewing’

Popularised by a kid called the Rizzler – don’t bother Googling the little shit – this is holding your tongue against the roof of your mouth to improve your facial structure permanently. There is no f**king way this works and if you do it, you are wrong.

‘Washed’ 

As in washed-up, which Gen Z are surprised the pop singers they ran a stan IG about three years ago are now because they haven’t had another hit. Happens to us all, kids. Specifically it will absolutely happen to you.

‘Generational’ 

Replacing ‘iconic’ as the misused word to describe anything they believe is good. ‘Sabrina Carpenter had a generational run’, for example, about three singles last year one of which you’re already struggling to recall the tune or title of.

‘Onika burger’

A version of ‘ate’ but referencing Nicki Minaj’s real name Onika and the phat ass she supposedly acquired from burgers. Its appeal is that it’s nonsensical and confusing to those not in on the joke. So by thinking ‘f**k right off’ you’re playing into their hands.

‘Sigma’

Someone who is successful and self-reliant, but unlike an ‘alpha’ he acts as a ‘lone wolf’. We definitely need more words to encourage the macho fantasies of delusional men, so enjoy watching this tosser discover he’s as mediocre as anyone else.

‘Fanum tax’

Playfully helping yourself to someone else’s food. Admittedly handy to have a term for,  just not this one. Named after Fanum, a Twitch streamer who adopts a character for his videos. He won ‘Best Roleplay Streamer’ at the 2023 Streamer Awards. Generational.

‘Pookie’

Means cute and doubles as a term of endearment. It’s shit, cloying and embarrassing, but saying it is its own punishment. It won’t take most people long to realise they don’t actually want to have sex or a relationship with a bellend who calls them ‘Pookie’.

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Prince Andrew's rent since 2003 vs your rent since 2003: a comparison

PRINCE Andrew has paid no monetary rent on the Royal Lodge since 2003, while you paid tens of thousands in rent for the same period. Who has the better deal? 

Prince Andrew: renting Royal Lodge

A listed home dating from the 19th century, the Royal Lodge has seven bedrooms and around 30 rooms in total. It is difficult to heat, has 98 hectares in grounds to be kept up, and cost the Prince £7.5 million of his own money to refurbish. And he has to share it with his ex-wife.

You: rented multiple properties

In contrast to Andrew, who is stuck in the equivalent of his brother’s guest room, you have enjoyed enviable freedom. Whether living in a bedsit above a chip shop, a modern apartment with your boyfriend, a room in a Victorian houseshare once you split up or your current studio, you have enjoyed variety, flexibility and non-fault evictions.

Prince Andrew: rent of one peppercorn (if demanded) 

For a man as detached from reality as Prince Andrew, used to private jets to paedophile islands, a peppercorn is a bugger to find. He has no idea about supermarkets or online shopping. Locating the peppercorn demanded every year, year on year, has all but broken him. Consequently he is 19 peppercorns in arrears and it remains a burden.

You: rent ranging from £485 a month to £1,895 a month

Meanwhile you were charged appropriate rents for the market at the time with no difficult maintenance costs and paid them from your salary – something which the poor Prince has never received. Landlords protected you, with threats if necessary, from ever damaging your credit rating by falling into arrears and didn’t bother you by fixing stuff.

Prince Andrew: stuck in Windsor Great Park

The park is lovely but vexingly open to the public and well outside of the M25. Public transport links are minimal so if Andrew wishes to go and dance the night away at Tramp while not sweating even slightly he has to arrange a car. It is also on the Heathrow flight path, reminding him of when he used to be flown around the world and making him sad.

You: enjoyed a wide variety of locations

From a place in Zone 2 so close to rail travel it kept you awake at night to your current place in easily-commutable Brent, you’ve benefited from not being tied down. From the kebab shops of Penge to the street dealers of Wood Green you’ve sampled the rich variety of life in a manner which the Prince can only dream of. And your journey’s not over yet!

Verdict: you’ve had a far better deal

Far from begrudging the tax you’ve paid to keep a man eighth in line to the throne in a supposedly easy life, you should be counting your blessings. He wishes he had your freedom with a rent only 70 per cent of your income. A letter’s arrived, it’s going up.