English

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Noun

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cool kid (plural cool kids)

  1. (informal, chiefly in the plural) A trendsetter, often a hipster; one considered worthy of emulation for their fashion sense etc.
    • 1995 September 3, Steve Hochman, “They're Rancid, Not Spoiled; They have major labels calling. Their fans worship them. But somehow these guys are staying true to their punk roots.”, in Los Angeles Times, page 5:
      "There was a lot of anticipation for this album," says Lisa Worden, music director of L.A. radio station KROQ-FM. "With Green Day now all over MTV and the mainstream, Rancid is the cool band. All the cool kids are wearing Rancid T-shirts."
    • 2002 April 26, Eric Gravning, “Not to Panic”, in The Texas Observer, volume 94, number 8, page 26:
      And isn't that the basis of so much of today's marketing, regardless of the product being sold? Be a rebel! Be an individual like everyone else! Rebels drink Diet Pepsi! Rebels watch the rebel director's new rebel film, Panic Room! It's dark and edgy and all the cool kids love it!
    • 2004, [2005], Danah Boyd, “Autistic Social Software,”, in Best Software Writing I, Apress, Ed. Joel Spolsky, →ISBN, page 39:
      But you want to be a continuous partial attention ninja master because you've been told that all of the cool kids are.
    • 2010, Jonathan Bernstein, Burning Ambition[1], Penguin, →ISBN, page 154:
      "Cereal for dinner?" He grinned and ruffled Alison's hair. "Is that what all the cool kids are doing now?"
    • 2010 November 10, Jason Wilson, “The cool kids beat me to the punch”, in Washington Post[2]:
      Punch, in case you didn't know, is what the cool kids are drinking.