Great site to keep my english skills updated for work and travel. I am really enjoying the lessons!
Gíria é uma linguagem muito informal ou palavras específicas usadas por um determinado grupo de pessoas. Você geralmente ouvirá gírias faladas com mais freqüência do que postas por escrito, embora e-mails e mensagens de texto contenham muitas gírias de conversação.
Embora a gíria às vezes receba uma má reputação por ser inadequada ou incorreta, também é altamente criativa e mostra que a língua inglesa está em constante evolução com o tempo.
Vamos mergulhar em 10 exemplos de gírias que você deve saber em 2021.
1. Bail / ditch
Bail and ditch both mean to have to break or cancel the plans with someone. For instance, you have to cancel the plans with your friends due to unfinished school work.
Example: “Sorry friends, I have to bail tonight.”
2. Balling / Ballin’
You may have heard of this term in many American pop songs, such as White Iverson by Post Malon when he said: “When I started ballin’ I was young”. In casual conversation, ballin’ means having a wealthy and luxurious lifestyle.
Example: “Heard you went on vacation in Los Angeles again last week, you are ballin’!”
3. Chill / chill out
Meaning “calm down” on casual occasions.
Example: If your friends are being overly excited at a football game, you can say: “Hey man, chill out.”
4. Down to earth
Referring to someone when they are humble, genuine, and easy to get along with.
Example: “I made a new friend at the museum last night, she was super down to earth. I would love to hang out with her again!”
5. GOAT
Not the cute animal, but the acronym for “Greatest of All Time”. Pronounce exactly like the animal, but GOAT should only be used to talk about someone who truly is the greatest of all time.
Example: “Kobe is the GOAT, may he rest in peace”
6. Slay
It is an informal way of saying being greatly impressed by someone from performing or just doing something well.
Example: “Beyoncé slays in her every performance!”
7. Stan
The word was first found in the song “Stan”, from American rapper Eminem’s album in 2000. Nowadays, it refers to die-hard fans of celebrities.
Example: “Did you watch JLo and Shakira performances at Superbowl last night, I stan for them!”
8. Tea / Here is the tea
It is slang for gossip or hot news circulating the situation. It is often used in terms such as what’s the tea (what’s the new gossip), spill the tea (tell someone about gossip), or just use it as one word referring to the hot news.
Example: “Would you like to spill the tea of your date from last night?”
9. Wack
Different than the traditional definition, wack refers to “boring” or “worse than expectations” in the US pop culture.
Example: “How was the movie you watched last night”,
“The movie was wack.”
10. What’s good
Equivalent to “what’s up” or “how are you doing”, often used as a causal greeting between friends. When an English speaker asks you that question, you can respond with what you are doing or how you are feeling at the moment.
Example: “What’s good? Haven’t seen you for a while”
“Nothing much, just studying and preparing for the upcoming exams! How about you?”
Verifique sua pontuação - Experimente nosso Quiz de inglês grátis + receba um bônus grátis