It was officially recognised by the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) in 2016. According to OED, the word lepak means "to ...
"67" is an ambiguous slang term made popular by Gen Alpha on social media and in middle schools across the country.
Global work will never be free of differences, and that’s the point. It’s within those differences that we discover new ...
Some of the words are cutesy (kerfuffle, jubilee). Others are onomatopoeic, with a similar sound to the idea they’re describing (meow, clink, squeak). Some are bizarre sounding (for example, syzygy: ...
Just outside the city is rolling countryside, with shopping villages of independent stores, the National Memorial Arboretum, ...
Dictionary.com's word of the year isn't even really a word. It's the viral term "6-7" that kids and teenagers can't stop ...
"Neurodivergent" is not just a way to describe medical diagnoses like autism and ADHD. It encompasses a range of ways in ...
For teachers, the numbers six and seven have suddenly taken on a new—and dreaded—significance this school year. From French class to gym class, students are frequently saying (or shouting) “six-seven” ...
Listen, that whole chaotic mood swing—last week, or the one before, who even knows—was extreme. A tight Friday wrap that pulled a cosmic all-nighter, spilling ...
It’s been a minute, but the 67 meme is just not going away. In fact, Dictionary.com last week announced that it’s the site’s Word of the Year. It means nothing, but it means a lot at the same time.