Semantic Drift
Explore viral phrases related to semantic drift
19
Phrases
4
Viral
01
grave
French youth transformed "serious" into an intensifier meaning really or very — pure emphasis that marks you as inside contemporary spoken French.
02
po
A single syllable Chileans add to everything — so automatic they don't notice using it, so distinctive that everyone else does.
03
currar
An informal Spanish word for work that carries the rhythm of everyday labor without the formality of professional language.
04
piseiro
A Northeastern Brazilian term for a dance party, and also the name of the fast electronic forró music played there.
05
sana all
A Filipino expression for being genuinely happy for someone's good fortune while wishing you had it too — envy without bitterness.
06
mi fa schifo
A direct declaration of genuine disgust — no softening, no playfulness, just honest revulsion toward something that repels you.
07
mid
A dismissal for anything that disappoints expectations—not terrible, just forgettable and overhyped.
08
flipar
When something amazes you so much your mind feels knocked sideways, or when you just really love something—that's flipar.
09
やばい
An all-purpose Japanese intensifier for anything extremely good or extremely bad — context and tone decide which.
10
j'avoue
Parisian youth slang that flips confession into emphatic agreement — validates truth rather than admits guilt, marking belonging through ironic formality.
11
weón
Chilean Spanish's chameleon word where tone determines everything — the same sound signals warmth, insult, or surprise depending on delivery.
12
pe
A sentence-ending particle that adds emphasis, warmth, or casual familiarity—the linguistic fingerprint that immediately marks a speaker as Peruvian.
13
al tiro
Chilean expression meaning "immediately" that everyone understands actually means "in twenty minutes" — the gap is the point, not a mistake.
14
gigil
The overwhelming urge to squeeze something adorable, clench your fists in frustration, or grit your teeth in suppressed anger—when emotion demands physical expression.
15
schmerzhafterweise
An adverb that signals what follows is painful to acknowledge—the word German speakers use when stating uncomfortable truths.
16
chelou
The word young French speakers use when something feels slightly off, suspicious, or uncomfortable — mild unease without heavy judgment.
17
causa
An informal address that marks comfort and belonging — you'd use it with close friends or casual acquaintances, never in formal settings.
18
pituco
What Peruvians call the wealthy elite of European descent — marks privilege, specific neighborhoods, and often implies disconnection from ordinary reality.
19
чел
The verb of making things happen through initiative and maneuvering — whether organizing events, starting romances, or setting plans in motion.
