“People decry basically anything and everything by declaring it,” he says, adding that the Twitter account was meant to show people that they’ve lost their grasp of the word and to chill out with using it.įor Millennials, cringe might evoke the essence of Gretchen Wieners trying to make fetch happen. “Originally, I think cringe meant something was awkward in an over-enthusiastic way, but it gradually came to essentially mean ‘anything I don't like’, or ‘anything that I used to like, but no longer do - like Twilight,” he explains. If you came across the account without knowing that it’s ironic, you might think, “Hm, yeah, I guess using the word ‘shrug’ is cringe.” The 21-year-old tells Bustle he created the account to show that literally anything could be seen as cringe, stressing the over-saturation of its use in popular culture. The page generates random words that have arbitrarily been designated cringe, posting, “anyone who still unironically uses the word “” is so #cringe tbh” daily. “The word has become functionally meaningless,” says the creator of the Twitter account, who asked to maintain his online anonymity. “To me, it’s people who say ‘doggo’ or who heroically share that they’re antivax, and the Rae Dunn font,” she says.įor some Gen Zers, the broad applicability of “cringe” is cringe unto itself. “It’s almost like a gagging feeling mixed with pity - ‘yikes.’ is a good way to describe it,” she says. “Cringe is the feeling of second-hand embarrassment for something that someone else is posting or doing or saying,” she says. To cusper Sydne, 27, a freelance designer, cringe means anything that’s humiliating. While its close cousin “ cheugy” might refer to a fur-lined boot, a skinny jean, or a cronut, cringe can be anything, and cringe can be everything. But according to Gen Z, cringe is both an adjective and an attitude. You’d probably use the word IRL as a verb to describe your reaction to nails on a chalkboard. (Think sheesh or elite.) Before Gen Z got their youthful hands on it, the word cringe meant “to recoil in distaste,” per Merriam-Webster. When Gen Z isn’t busy trolling Millennials for their choice of jeans or carbon footprints, they’re hard at work bending and twisting the meaning of words you thought you once knew well.
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