cheugy
English
editEtymology
editReportedly coined by American high school student Gaby Rasson in 2013 to describe "people who were slightly off trend" and subsequently popularized by her peers.[1]
Pronunciation
editAdjective
editcheugy (comparative more cheugy or cheugier, superlative most cheugy or cheugiest)
- (Internet slang, neologism, chiefly US) Uncool; tryhard.
- 2021 April 29, Taylor Lorenz, “What is ‘cheugy’? You know it when you see it”, in New York Times[1], Style:
- Alex Lugger, 32, a boat marketer in Springfield, Mo., said that she self identifies as a bit cheugy. (She also learned about the word through TikTok.) “We were basic in our 20s and now we’re cheugy in our 30s,” she said.
- 2021 September 22, Carter Sawatzky, “An Autopsy Of #Girlboss Feminism”, in Mars' Hill, Trinity Western University, page 15:
- Derived from the notoriously cheugy “live, laugh, love,” the mantra “gaslight, gatekeep, girlboss” found its funny by lumping together online phenomena the internet hates most.
- 2022, Claire Cook, Must Love Dogs: Lucky Enough, unnumbered page (published 4 March 2022):
- "You might want to ditch the Crocs to pass the vibe check," Siobhan whispered. "They're a little cheugy."
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:cheugy.
Derived terms
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ Taylor Lorenz, "What Is ‘Cheugy’? You Know It When You See It.", New York Times, 29 April 2021
Further reading
edit- “cheugy”, in Urban Dictionary, launched 1999.