Germany's dictionary giant Langescheidt announced the German Youth Word of the Year 2016 ("Jugendwort des Jahres"). The winner, however, is a term coming from the English language: "fly."
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Germany's youth words of the year since 2010
So smash, cringe and goofy: Teen talk is annually recognized by expert linguists and Langenscheidt publishers. Check out German youth words of the year from this year and years past.
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Goofy
Everyone knows the Walt Disney cartoon anthropomorphic dog who is clumsy and a bit foolish. Young Germans have adopted the term to describe someone who is silly, eccentric or awkward — usually in an affectionate way. It has now been named German Youth Word of the Year 2023.
Image: Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection/picture alliance
2022: Smash
The English verb "smash" was chosen as German Youth Word of the Year 2022. It roughly means "starting something with someone," "picking someone up" or "having sex with someone." It comes from the dating game app "Smash or Pass," where potential partners are either accepted as a "smash" by swiping right or rejected as a "pass" by swiping left, inspired by the dating app Tinder.
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2021: Cringe
The English word "cringe" was selected as the German Youth Word of the Year 2021. Just like in English, German teens use it to describe a person or situation they find extremely embarrassing. But the German language also has its own term to express the feeling of being embarrassed because someone else has embarrassed themselves (without noticing): "fremdschämen" — secondhand embarrassment.
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2020: Lost
The German Youth Word of the Year in 2020 was also an English word, "lost." German teens don't use it in the sense of having lost their way, but to express a lack of perspective, or of not knowing what to do. They might also use the term in a math class for instance as a way of saying "I don't get it." (2019 marked a year when the "Youth Word of the Year" was not chosen.)
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2018: Ehrenmann / Ehrenfrau
Man or woman of honor: that's the German Youth Word of the Year for 2018 (no word was selected in 2019). It refers to a person you can always count on and who's loyal to his friends and family. It can also be used ironically as an insult, when someone claims to have strong principles but doesn't apply them in real life. German rappers often use "Ehrenmann" in their lyrics.
Image: REUTERS
2017: I bims
To be or not to be? Germany's young people would answer Shakespeare's most famous existential question with "I bims," derived from "Ich bin" — I am. It was chosen as the German Youth Word of the Year in 2017.
Image: DLA Marbach
2016: am Fly sein
When a person is flying high and ready to, say, party all night, German teens will highlight this energy by borrowing from US hip-hop slang, literally saying "you're on fly." In English, "I'm so fly" is a rapper way of saying you're cool. It was embodied by the main character in the film "Super Fly" from 1972, with its famous Curtis Mayfield soundtrack.
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2015: Smombie
Do you check your phone while you're walking and run into things? Then apparently you have something in common with German teens. The 2015 German Youth Word of the Year was "Smombie" — a cross between smartphone and zombie. Walking while checking for a new like, follow or message can be hazardous. Perhaps Germany should adopt this phone lane idea spotted in China.
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2014: Läuft bei dir
"Läuft bei dir" basically means "things are going well with you." But as with most of the youth words of the year, this one can also contain traces of irony depending on the context. It's perhaps always a question of perspective: Despite the mud, the heavy metal fans in this picture taken at the Wacken open air festival still seem to think everything rocks.
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2013: Babo
Who's the leader of the pack among your friends? Chances are, they're the babo: that is, the boss, the ringleader, the head honcho. German rapper Haftbefehl (pictured) may also like to see himself as the babo. In 2013, he released a track called "Chabos know who the babo is." While "chabos" (roughly, guys) is derived from Angloromani, babo comes from Turkish.
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2012: YOLO
In 2012, an English abbreviation won German Youth Word of the Year. YOLO stands for You Only Live Once. In that case, live it up. Maybe that means launching your singing career on YouTube, getting a colorful tattoo or just dancing in the streets with your friends.
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2011: Swag
It's not surprising that teen speak is heavily influenced by the music scene. Swag was borrowed from the American rap scene and made it over to Germany around 2010, becoming popular thanks to Austrian rapper Money Boy's track "Turn My Swag On." If you've got swag, you radiate coolness.
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2010: Niveaulimbo
Ever played limbo? Then you know there's a limit to how far down you can go — even if you're really good. "Niveaulimbo" — literally, limbo level — refers to the ever-sinking quality of something. That could be a TV show, a joke or a party that starts getting out of hand.
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Teens certainly have a way with words - one that is almost impossible at times to keep up with. That's why in 2008, German publisher Langenscheidt decided to run a competition for the Youth Word of the Year, something along the lines of everyone's household dictionary meets urban dictionary.
The results have been impressive at times (when "hartzen" was coined as a term used to describe laziness, borrowing the word, however, from the German "Hartz IV" welfare system) and at other times less so (when YOLO hit German shores in 2012), but always interesting to follow.
Young people get to submit their ideas, which initially are narrowed down to a shortlist of 30 contestants and later distilled to a winner with four follow-ups. Not only does the Youth Word of the Year competition show the fluidity of language but it also provides priceless insights into the minds of teenagers, and their take on what's going on in popular culture and politics.
And the winner is…
With 2016 having seen its fair share of change around the world, the jury selected a surprisingly apolitical word. While in English-speaking countries kids are used to being "fly," the term only made its way to Germany recently and has been adopted by young people across the country.
In its own thesaurus-style description of the term, Langenscheidt says that "fly" means "to be particularly happening or cool." However, only 4.4 percent of participants online agreed that "fly" should be the winner; the jury, made up of 20 people including teenagers, seemed to disagree.
Other contestants this year included "bae," also a term borrowed from English (which stands for "before anyone else"), "Hopfensmoothie," which translates literally as a "hops smoothie" and means beer, and "isso," which is short for "Das ist so" - "that's how it is." This was also the winner in the popular vote, garnering more than 20 percent of young people's online vote.
Last year's winner was the term "smombie," a portmanteau used to describe a "smartphone zombie." But smombies certainly aren't fly, especially when you're out to have a Hopfensmoothie with bae.
Isso.
Discover the selected Youth Words of the Year since 2008 in the gallery above and 10 other finalists in 2016 by clicking through the one below.
10 expressions nominated for Germany's Youth Word of the Year 2016
Can you talk like a German teen? These 10 terms are among the 30 nominated to be crowned Germany's next Youth Word of the Year.
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Hopfensmoothie
Of the 30 slang terms nominated to become Germany's next Youth Word of the Year, it's not astonishing that one of them has to do with beer. But with a twist: "Hopfensmoothie" literally means "hop smoothie" in a nod to the growing popularity of superfoods, a category that typically doesn't include beer. In Germany, youths as young as 16 are permitted to drink the stuff.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/C. Stache
darthvadern
Would you feel flattered if your adolescent child called you Darth Vader? Probably not. Here, German youths have turned the Star Wars figure into a verb to use against their own fathers when they overdo their role. A typical exchange. Dad: "I give you boundaries because I'm your father!" Teen: "Stop darthvadering around, dad!"
Image: imago stock&people
Googleschreiber
A play on the word "Kugelschreiber," meaning "pen," a "Googleschreiber" is someone who types a URL rather than a key word or phrase into a Google search field. If you already know the URL, you can enter it into your browser directly, saving valuable second that could be spent on Snapchat or Facebook instead.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Dumfall
Do you often find yourself spilling on your shirt or tripping on your own feet? That's what a German teen might refer to as a "Dumfall" - an economical way of saying "dummer Unfall," or "dumb accident." Being a klutz among adolescents can be dangerous. They are all armed with smartphones and your photo can land on Instagram faster than you can say, "Give me a napkin, please."
Image: Fotolia/Jürgen Fälchle
Yologamie
Are youth today non-committal? Well, commitment, it seems, can be flexible. This word borrows from the 2012 German Youth Word of the Year, "YOLO," meaning "You only live once." The opposite of monogamy, "Yologamie" is an open relationship.
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Tindergarten
When it comes to finding those multiple partners for "Yologamie" - or for those teens who prefer a traditional dating relationship - many turn to apps. A cross between "Tinder" and "Kindergarten," "Tindergarten" is your collection of online dating contacts. Since teen romances tend to be short-lived, it's always best to keep a few irons in the fire.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Kraufmann
Swaggernaut
Are you always dressed in the latest styles? Do you have a clever remark for every situation? Are you gorgeous, fun to be around, and have one million Instagram followers? Then you might just qualify as a "Swaggernaut" - a very cool person. (OMG, cool is so out!) Drawing on "swag" from the rap scene, the term's astronaut reference gives it an out-of-this-world flair.
Image: Fotolia/George Dolgikh
Tintling
We forgot to mention: If you don't have a tattoo (or several), you're obviously not a "Swaggernaut." While your tattoo artist is likely also a "Swaggernaut," he or she may be called a "Tintling." The term borrows the German word for ink: "Tinte." The ending -ling refers to a male person, often pejoratively. But, of course, you'd never want to offend your tattoo artist. Here, the -ling is ironic.
Image: Imago/N. Celaya
Tweef
With so much of teen life taking place online, it's only natural that things can sometimes get a bit heated. A "tweef" (tweet plus beef) is a fight on Twitter. While rash online disputes can get nasty, there is a certain art in restricting your anger to 140 characters.
Image: Imago/R. Peters
Analog-Spam
Ever increasing digitalization seems to have had no impact on the huge amount of junk mail we get in our real-life mailboxes. "Analog-Spam" refers to those unsolicited catalogues, letters and fliers that land in the mailbox in front of your door. But how many teens actually volunteer to get the mail at their parents' house?