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When internet slang sneaks into our real-life conversations

First we type it, then we say it out loud, and one day it slips out at the family dinner table. How web vocabulary is colonising our everyday talk.

By La rédaction LëtzBuzz··2 min read

There's that very specific, slightly awkward moment when a word born online leaves your mouth unannounced, mid real-life conversation. You've typed it a thousand times, and suddenly you hear it ring out loud, at a bus stop or over a coffee. In a multilingual country like Luxembourg, where people already juggle several languages within the same sentence, these web expressions wedge themselves in even faster. Let's unpack this slide from screen to speech.

From writing to speech, a leap more natural than it seems

Historically, slang was born in speech and took years to reach the written word. The web reversed the flow. Today, a term first appears in a comment, a caption, a message, then climbs back up into spoken conversation. We use it playfully, with a hint of irony, like a wink between insiders. And by dint of saying it as a joke, we end up saying it for real.

What makes this vocabulary so sticky is its efficiency. A single word can compress a whole emotion, an attitude, a vibe that's hard to translate otherwise. When a web expression does the job of an entire sentence, the brain adopts it without resistance. Language always follows the shortest path, and the internet has multiplied the shortcuts.

A generational marker... and a test of distance

Internet slang is also a badge. Using it signals that you're plugged in, in the loop, on the right side of the joke. That's exactly why it becomes cringe the moment an older generation tries to clumsily reclaim it, or a brand drops it into an ad. The word instantly loses its value as a marker of belonging. The freshness of slang is fragile: it lives off its relative rarity.

Should we worry about it for the sake of language? Not really. French, German and Luxembourgish have always absorbed loanwords without collapsing. Web slang is just a new layer, faster and more playful. Most of these words will vanish as quickly as they arrived, a few will stick, and that's perfectly fine. A living language is precisely a language that lets itself be contaminated.

Sources

  • Décryptage LëtzBuzz
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