Posted on 10/30/2025 11:52:45 AM PDT by Red Badger

Dictionary.com has named "67" (pronounced sik-sehh-vin) as the 2025 Word of the Year.
Not joking.
https://t.co/UXHZisA5Bw names ‘67’ as the 2025 Word of the Year. pic.twitter.com/VxpXjmeRFu— Pop Base (@PopBase) October 29, 2025
A number has been named Word of the Year -- and it's not even allowed to be pronounced "sixty-seven."
the alphabet finding out that a number won “word of the year” pic.twitter.com/ugfatdn70j https://t.co/KRKXt9cuok— wiLL (@willfulchaos) October 29, 2025
You're supposed to do this when you say "67":

I gotta send it over to Dictionary.com for an explanation for why they chose 67.

But what does 67 mean?
Perhaps the most defining feature of 67 is that it's impossible to define. It's meaningless, ubiquitous, and nonsensical. In other words, it has all the hallmarks of brainrot. It's the logical endpoint of being perpetually online, scrolling endlessly, consuming content fed to users by algorithms trained by other algorithms. And what are we left with in the wake of this relentless sensory overload? 67. Still, it remains meaningful to the people who use it because of the connection it fosters. 67 shows the speed at which a new word can rocket around the world as a rising generation enters the global conversation.
How about the 67 origin story:
The origin of this most modern use of 67 is thought to be a song called 'Doot Doot (6 7)' by Skrilla. (This is an opportune moment to mention that you may also see it written as 6 7, 6-7, or six-seven, but the most important thing is to never pronounce it as 'sixty-seven.') It was quickly reinforced by viral TikToks featuring basketball players and a young boy who will forevermore be known as the '67 Kid.'
Here he is:
VIDEO AT LINK..................
Parents, if you wanna throw your kids off, respond to a "67" with a "forty-one."
pic.twitter.com/K77C6VbCYX— Davy Jones (@itsNTBmedia) October 30, 2025
(I don't know if this is actually cool, but at least you'll look equally as dumb as your child did when he said "67.")
Guys, I don't know why this whole 67 thing became a thing ... but, uhh, it's a thing. And Dictionary.com named it the Word of the Year!

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Regardless, it has meaning both in the Lewis Carroll poem AND in modern conversational English.
Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe:
All mimsy were the borogoves,
And the mome raths outgrabe.
If you have actually read Through the Looking Glass, you know that those seemingly nonsense words all have meaning; Carrol kindly defines them for you, the reader (indirectly, through the character of Alice).
Again, "6-7" conveys no meaning. As a middle-school kid what "6-7" means. You'll get either a blank stare, or self-referential babble.
‘Smog’ is another made-up word, combining smoke and fog...it was created in the early 1900s.
Look at the pictures in the OP. Those boys are babbling “Six Seven huh huh huh” repeatedly ... but their minds are empty. It doesn’t mean anything. It was never meant to mean anything. If you can get them to turn their brains back on for a moment, they’ll even TELL YOU it doesn’t mean anything. It’s nothing like Lewis Carrol’s seemingly silly poetry.
It’s meaningless babble. Gibberish. Blather. Drivel. Brain rot.
Snark was a pure invention. Eventually ‘67’ may become a word carrying a meaning.
Language is never static, especially one put together from and infiltrated by other languages as modern English is.
It is unlike the repeated utterance of "six-seven" which conveys no meaning and is not intended to convey meaning.
86 means to reject, discard, or cancel.
73s means “Best Regards” for ham radio and shortwave enthusiasts.
Eventually ‘67’ may become a word carrying a meaning.
Perhaps. Or perhaps not.
In any case, it was not invented to convey meaning (it does not convey the literal meaning of the numbers). It does not now convey any meaning.
I know what you're trying to do here, and it just doesn't work. Coining a word or phrase to convey a meaning (even fictional) is entirely different from uttering sounds that convey no meaning and are not intended to convey meaning.
I know about 73s; but how did 86 come to be chosen to carry that meaning?.
But what about three and nine?
You mean what the Gators record will be this year?
Teenagers have always had fads, and the fads have often been ridiculous and meaningless.
I think what I see you trying to do here is to suggest that the ‘67’ generation are brainless.
I just don’t think a word fad is the sign of cultural destruction and ‘brain rot’ that you seem to think it is.
There are things to worry about concerning young people, but this one just isn’t high on my list.
You're wrong on that count for the simple reason that I don't suggest ANYTHING of "generations". I think "generation whatever" rhetoric is absolute bullstuff.
I think a "word fad" that literally conveys no meaning is an unusual thing, to say the least ... all of the examples you have provided do, in fact, convey meaning. I expect utterly meaningless babble from babies, politicians, and corporate HR representatives. Children of "middle school age" are usually trying to say something ... which adults might not like. This mindless gibberish is a symptom of a larger problem: television (what's left of it), antisocial media, and government education have all combined to turn their brains off.
You’ve reiterated my point.
You think a silly teenage fad is a sign of brains turned-off.
I think it’s just another stupid adolescent fad which every generation has had. They’ve had nonsense fads forever, regardless of the status of the education system.
They play a game like this and think they’re ‘cool’. And then they grow out of it.
Language is the most mutable, inconstant of the systems we’ve created. It’s not math.
And it’s a perfect plaything for the teenage need to create something all their own - and the more it shocks and alienates the grownups the better it is.
X Æ A-Xii is apparently the legal name of Elon Musk’s son...
I doubt it will ever become ‘hot’, but it sure is unique.
Why is six afaid of seven?
Because seven ate nine.
So it’s either meaningless or they don’t know its meaning and it’s the “word of the year.” Morons.
The “67 kid” is still Carl Yastrzemski, whatever the little kids say.
So, what, Badgers vs. Gators for the Bottom Ten Bowl some Tuesday in December?
Three and Nine was a Roxy Music song and I could never figure what that phrase meant.

LaMelo Ball is 6'7.
Vibe.
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