Irritating kids’ phrase that leaves parents baffled named as word of the year despite term not meaning anything

IRRITATING kids’ phrase “six-seven” is being included in the dictionary — even though it means nothing.

The term has circulated TikTok and playgrounds since early summer, baffling parents and teachers.

Illustration of a boy with his mouth open, gesturing with his hands, with large yellow numbers 6 and 7 floating above his hands.
Irritating kids’ phrase ‘six-seven’ is being included in the dictionaryCredit: Unknown

Although it is nonsense, it is generally used by Generation Alpha to express a vague sense of “maybe”, “sort of”, or general indifference.

Dictionary.com has made it Word of the Year.

A spokesman said: “It’s the logical end-point of being perpetually online.

“Endless scrolling, endless content, algorithms feeding algorithms.

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“Slang now spreads for the sake of spreading.”

The phrase, said to originate from rap track Doot Doot (67) by Skrilla, has become the latest form of “brainrot slang” — defined as language repeated because it sounds amusing.

Other examples in­clude “skibidi”.

Linguists say part of six-seven’s popularity is due to how it excludes adults.

One parent said: “My son says it all day long. Not in context.

“Not to make a joke. Just . . . constantly.”

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