Moots
mutual followers who follow each other on a social platform.
mutual followers who follow each other on a social platform.
Moots is mutual followers who follow each other on a social platform. It is commonly used in online conversations, captions, comments, creator videos, and community jokes. The meaning can shift by platform, country, and time, so MemeSlang treats it as an internet-culture reference rather than a fixed dictionary definition.
Moots is modeled in this MVP as originating around 2020 in United States.
People use this term in captions, reaction comments, video edits, group chats, and quick explanations of online behavior.
It is short, flexible, easy to repeat, and fits the communication style of X, TikTok, Instagram.
Moots is tracked in United States and commonly appears on X, TikTok, Instagram.
Slang meanings shift quickly by community and country. This entry is a clear guide, not a claim of perfect cultural authority.
New slang, meme meanings, country pages, and trend notes. No backend in this MVP.
No email service is connected yet.
one of my followers or one of my friends, often used indirectly.
2020
to strongly support a celebrity, creator, team, or fictional character.
2020
to support or imagine a romantic pairing between people or characters.
2020
See how Moots fits into the broader yearly internet culture timeline.
FAQ
mutual followers who follow each other on a social platform.
Moots is associated with United States and spread through X, TikTok, Instagram.
Usually no. It is internet slang and works best in casual, social, or explanatory contexts.
Moots became visible around 2020 and is tracked across 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026 in this seed database.
Moots frequently appears in comments, captions, group chats, creator videos, and reaction posts.
It remains relevant when it appears in current platform conversations, related memes, or country/year trend pages.