Are you a “sigma”? Do you have “rizz”? The youngest generation is bamboozling its elders with terms all their own.
Do you know what a gyat is? What about a rizzler? And how, precisely, does one pay a Fanum tax?
Welcome to the language of Gen Alpha, the cohort coming up right behind Gen Z. These children of millennials have begun a generational rite of passage — employing their own slang terms and memes, and befuddling their elders in the process.
Which brings us back to gyat (rhymes with “yacht,” with a hard “g” and a firm emphasis on “yat”).
“There’s no cute way to say it — it’s just a word for a big butt,” said Alta, a 13-year-old eighth grader in Pennsylvania. “If someone has a big butt, someone will say ‘gyat’ to it.”
Alta and her brother Kai, an 11-year-old sixth grader, said they had learned the word on TikTok and that it had suddenly become popular among their classmates. The internet encyclopedia Know Your Meme credits the sudden popularity of “gyat” to the Twitch livestreamer Kai Cenat. (In August, Mr. Cenat made headlines when his fans swarmed Union Square Park in Manhattan after he promised to give away gaming consoles at no cost.)
“I don’t say ‘gyat’ to people, though, unless they’re my friend,” Alta said. “And we say it to our mom.”
Several other new words have become part of this generation’s vernacular, and six members of Gen Alpha offered their decoding services for this article. (Their parents gave permission for them to be interviewed, with the agreement that their last names would not be used.) Many of the children cited a catchy parody song making the rounds on TikTok as a key to the slang’s rising popularity. The lyrics go like this:
Sticking out your gyat for the rizzler
You’re so skibidi
You’re so Fanum tax
I just wanna be your sigma
A rizzler is a “good person,” according to Malcolm, a 10-year-old in Washington state.
“Having rizz is when you have good game,” Alta said. “Being a rizzler is like when you’re a pro at flirting with people.” (Rizz is short for charisma.)
The word can be used as a compliment or a joke, according to Jaedyn, 12. She said that the boys at her school in New Jersey had been singing the song lately, adding that it gave her a headache.
Jaedyn added that “nobody really knows” the meaning of “skibidi.” It has entered the lexicon by way of the animated series “Skibidi Toilet,” which has racked up more than 700 million views on YouTube. A typical episode is about 15 seconds long and features a man who pops his head out of a toilet bowl and launches into a song heavy on the use of the word that gives the show its name. (It’s easier if you just watch it. Boomers might think of “Skibidi Toilet” as a 2020s answer to the animations of “Monty Python’s Flying Circus.”)
“I don’t like,” Tariq, 8, said of the series. “It creeps me out. Every time I go to the toilet, I just want to get it quick done.” Tariq, who lives in New York State and is known online as Corn Kid, said he was not familiar with the other terms.
Fanum tax refers to Fanum, a popular streamer on Twitch who regularly appears online with Mr. Cenat. When friends are eating in Fanum’s presence, he insists that they share some of their food with him. That’s the Fanum tax.
And sigma has something to do with wolves.
“Everyone in my grade, at least, says it in a way where they’re like the alpha of the pack,” Alta said. “If you’re trying to say you’re dominant and you’re the leader, you’ll call yourself ‘sigma.’”
In a TikTok video posted in October, Philip Lindsay, a special-education math teacher in Payson, Ariz., listed a few terms he had been hearing in the classroom, including Fanum tax and gyat. “Which does not mean ‘get your act together,’” Mr. Lindsay, 29, said in the video, which has since been viewed over four million times.
His students tried at first to make him believe that gyat was an acronym that stood for “go you athletic team,” he said in an interview. He recently had to explain gyat’s real meaning to a colleague whose students had convinced the teacher to display the word in the classroom.
Mr. Lindsay said the new words struck him as more “meme-like” than earlier slang terms. He added that he believed they were “driven mainly by social media, TikTok specifically.”
Gen Alpha is still being born, according to demographers. Its birth years span from 2010 to 2025, said Mark McCrindle, a generational researcher in Australia who coined the name Gen Alpha several years ago.
Online, members of Gen Z have begun to realize they are no longer the new kids on the digital block — and that Gen Alpha might be coming for them, in the same way that they had once gone after millennials.
Anthony Mai, a TikTok creator with a large following, recently posted a video of himself wearing a comically deadpan expression as the Gen Alpha-slang song played. “Gen Alpha is making their own memes now,” he wrote in a caption. “It has begun. We are the next cringe gen on the chopping block.”
Intergenerational comedy has become a staple on social media platforms, where creators dramatize the differences between age groups. Skibidi and gyat fit snugly into the memes and video shorts belonging to this subgenre.
“Whenever I think about the linguistic differences between generations, I just think, Are we really going to do this again?” said Jessica Maddox, an assistant professor of digital media at the University of Alabama. “Generational differences and divides have always been played up to some extent, even before the heyday of the internet, but social media really exacerbates them.” She cited “OK, boomer,” a retort popularized online by Gen Z in 2019, as an example.
As Gen Alpha’s slang terms make their way into the wider (read: older) world, the young people responsible for their popularity are ready to move onto what’s next.
“If millennials start saying them, we’ll be like, ‘We’re done with these now,’” Jaedyn said.
Shit is the concept of previous decades having their own identity and distinction, but the aughts through the 20s have all just been indistinguishable going to apply to memes soon?
Come to think of it, Pepe and Wojak have had way too long shelf lives for memes.
As culture becomes more and more homogenised under later stage imperialism to appeal to the biggest target audience possible, the distinctions between each generation are going to get lesser and fewer.
its literally 2013 era gmod videos but people online keep going "wow BACK IN MY DAY, MY slop WAS ACTUALLY SOOOOO MUCH BETTER/SMART!" and they're like, 20. I'm like 23 and to me both are identical! I mean seriously this is the kind of shit these losers pass off as sacred => https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3D3Z8eqFIf0 I remember watching this as a child laughing my ass off eating my nutella toast snacks and drinking milk, and I have no nostalgia for this because people keep making these every year, the slop hasnt evolved! It's embarassing, the lowest form of culture war you could engage with..
It's older than that. I remember "nonsense video made in gmod" as a genre from 2008 or so, and as soon as SFM was released that started replacing it as the specific tool used but it was the same "TF2 assets doing lolrandom shit" as ever. Like I remember playing on CS:S servers that had soundbites from viral nonsense gmod videos in their soundboards when I was in college.
As a 20 year old I never came across gmod but I thought youtube poops were the funniest slop imaginable. And when I was like 5 I watched this, my brother thought it was the hilarious but I just had nightmares about it lmao
I disagree. Skibidibi toilet is vastly more dystopian than most videos from that era, which was the tail end of "lolrandom XD" that started in the early aughts. Based on tone alone, I would place Skibidibi toilet at least post-2016. I mean, it isn't really lolrandom compared with actual lolrandom from that era.
Could you elaborate? It has a vague overarching narrative, which is certainly an innovation from the lolrandom stuff from a decade+ ago, but I don't see how a video series about scatting toilets fighting camera people isn't still grown from the same soil.
I am 90% sure the entire reason teenagers develop slang is so I don't understand it. Also there is nothing more embarassing than an adult trying to keep up with teenage slang
Once you reach this age you have to stop internalizing that embarrassment. Is some old person talking about rizzing up their wife mad cringe? Yeah, but only for the young people who have to hear it.
My 12 year old tells me that these days "to brexit" has become football slang for making a rough tackle. NPC is a common insult and trashy girls are described by a term that can best be described as "stomper chicks".
Given the alpha kids are using formats and styles similar to the ones zoomers use so far, it's just a context clues translation game for now. It'll get harder when they are graduating high school and make some weird-ass shit, and I'll have lost it by the next generation.
“I don’t like,” Tariq, 8, said of the series. “It creeps me out. Every time I go to the toilet, I just want to get it quick done.” Tariq, who lives in New York State and is known online as Corn Kid, said he was not familiar with the other terms.
A group of mid-level managers has workshopped the next trend at an away day at a shit spa hotel and decided they can somehow market and financialise gen alpha already. Outright failing to understand that previous generations were not the trends that were contemporaneously popular.
"hella" is regional northern california slang that predates millennials
"wicked" I guess depends on whether you're using it as an adjective or noun. as an adjective, it's regional slang from New England, but as a noun I think it did became popular with millennials because of Harry Potter
We have to put these new gen names on hold until some kind of event happens there’s no discernible difference between Amerikan younger millennials, gen z, or gen alpha besides a range of people age 25-30 growing up partly without the pocket computer / slop module
The only one that's really gen alpha slang is skibibi toilet. Sigma and rizz is more gen z, x tax thing has been going around for years and could honestly have started with the boomers, and gyat is just an exaggerated pronounciation of the word butt.
Saw an interesting Video regarding that recently - usually a generation's slang terms are actually generated by the generation before it, but adapted by the younger one. Gen Z slang was defined by Millenial celebs & influencers, Gen A slang is being defined by Gen Z influencers.
dropped up coiners wouldn't know sizzles for gift cards.
these are just children repeating noises their phones make during native ads. no kinda cant to it. not slang. not until you have something to hide from the squares more than "Teacher got a Big Ass haha Paw Patrol"