Search
Tag

#phrase Slang and Meme Meanings

Explore MemeSlang entries tagged phrase, including related slang, memes, examples, origin years, and platform context.

12

Entries

5

Platforms

7

Years

Top #phrase entries

Open any entry to see its meaning, origin, examples, related slang, country signals, and platform usage.

slang

Finna

a casual form meaning going to or about to.

slangphrasespeech

2020 · US · TikTok, X

slang

Gaslight Gatekeep Girlboss

an ironic slogan remixing internet self-help and villain energy.

slangironyphrase

2021 · US · TikTok, X

slang

Shibal Sekkiya

a Korean profanity phrase often referenced in clips, captions, and fandom jokes.

slangkoreanphrase

2021 · KOREA · TikTok, K-pop

meme

Very Demure Very Mindful

a viral phrase cluster about polished, restrained, or performatively composed behavior.

memestylephrase

2024 · US · TikTok, Instagram

slang

For Real

a casual confirmation phrase meaning seriously, genuinely, or I agree.

slangtruthagreement

2020 · US · TikTok, X

slang

Spill the Tea

share the gossip, details, or behind-the-scenes information.

slanggossipphrase

2020 · US · TikTok, X

slang

Hits Different

feels unusually meaningful, emotional, or better in a specific context.

slangreactionemotion

2020 · US · TikTok, X

slang

Tea

gossip, insider information, or interesting social details.

slanggossipsocial

2020 · US · TikTok, X

slang

Hyung

a Korean term used by males for an older brother or older male friend.

slangkoreanfandom

2020 · KOREA · K-pop, YouTube

slang

Unnie

a Korean term used by females for an older sister or older female friend.

slangkoreanfandom

2020 · KOREA · K-pop, TikTok

slang

Noona

a Korean term used by males for an older sister or older female friend.

slangkoreanfandom

2020 · KOREA · K-pop, YouTube

slang

Aigoo

a Korean expression used for surprise, frustration, sympathy, or affection.

slangkoreanreaction

2020 · KOREA · K-pop, TikTok

FAQ

Common questions

What does the phrase tag include?

It groups MemeSlang entries that share the phrase category, format, audience, or cultural context.

Why can the same term appear in several tag pages?

A single meme or slang term can be a reaction format, a platform trend, and a community reference at the same time.

How should I use tag pages for research?

Use the tag page to scan related terms, compare platforms, then open the detailed meaning, origin, and examples pages for individual entries.