English edit

Etymology edit

From youth +‎ quake, by analogy with earthquake. Coined by American magazine editor Diana Vreeland in 1965.

Noun edit

youthquake (plural youthquakes)

  1. (informal) A noticeable shift in society or culture in response to the activities or tastes of younger members of the culture.
    • 1970 June 8, “The Skinheads”, in Time:
      Britain produced many of the first temblors of the youthquake. There were the elegantly dressed but often vicious Teddy boys of the late 1950s. There were the gentler Mods and the tough leather-jacketed, working-class rockers in the '60s.
    • 2017, David Friend, The Naughty Nineties:
      The trend was partly a manifestation of the Silicon Valley youthquake that was powering the dot-com economy.

Translations edit