Six-seven

BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
The kids are using this to annoy/bamboozle the adults.

Have you come across it yet?

I think it means 'whatever'.

Not sure where it started

My answer is 8,9,10. 🙂

Maybe it's the meaning of life?

6x7=42

Comments

  • DafydDafyd Hell Host
    Dafling minor finds it annoying when the usual suspects among her classmates start it.
    I don't think anyone knows what it means - it's just a thing to be in on that adults aren't.
  • Hasn't this been discussed already , either somewhere here in Heaven or All Saints?
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    edited December 13
    Hasn't this been discussed already , either somewhere here in Heaven or All Saints?
    Yes, though I forget which thread.

    Short version: It comes from the rap song “Doot Doot (6 7)” by Skrilla, released in February of this year. Part of the point is that it has no set meaning (even in the song), but can mean whatever someone using it wants it to mean in a given context, leaving outsiders (adults) bewildered.


  • Humpty Dumpty is alive and well!
    :grin:
  • 6 7 found here in Heaven, in the thread "Phrases that Date You", back in October.
  • My standard response to 6-7 is "10-4, good buddy"---which annoys/bamboozles the youth because most of them are unfamiliar with CB Radio slang.
  • carexcarex Shipmate
    So its purpose is to leave someone at sixes and sevens?
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    I’d be inclined to replied, 7,8 who do we appreciate - but I have never encountered the phenomenon in the wild.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    edited December 13
    According to an article in The Atlantic newsletter the phrase reached its peak around Halloween and is expected to disappear around New Years. Something else is bound to replace it, of course.
  • HarryCHHarryCH Shipmate
    Maybe we can invent one.
  • Randomly intoning "Ship of Fools" should do it...
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    Then when asked -

    "I visit the Ship every day " 😊
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    HarryCH wrote: »
    Maybe we can invent one.

    One of the adult leaders of my church youth group when I was a teenager would always try really hard to be “down with the kids”. We all thought it was hilarious. We then invented a phrase (can’t remember what it was now) that was utterly meaningless just to see how long it would be before he started saying it.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    That's so fetch, @Spike!
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    The "yoof" might be surprised that us oldies* are quite familiar with the expression "all at sixes and sevens", and that it was used by someone as (probably) uncool as Gilbert & Sullivan (from HMS Pinafore):
    Fair moon, to thee I sing,
    Bright regent of the heavens
    Say, why is everything
    Either at sixes or at sevens?
    Say, why is everything
    Either at sixes or at sevens?

    * Oh dear - I've just identified myself as an oldie ... :flushed:

  • MMMMMM Shipmate
    ….but comes from the ?15th century rivalry between the Merchant Taylors and another livery company for precedence. It was decided they should alternate between 6 and 7. I think they still do.

    Or so I was told when I was a Livery Company person (not one of the Great Twelve, a modern one).

    MMM
  • SparrowSparrow Shipmate
    Spike wrote: »
    HarryCH wrote: »
    Maybe we can invent one.

    One of the adult leaders of my church youth group when I was a teenager would always try really hard to be “down with the kids”. We all thought it was hilarious. We then invented a phrase (can’t remember what it was now) that was utterly meaningless just to see how long it would be before he started saying it.

    Yes, isn't all this just exactly what every younger generation has done - invent their own private catch phrases just to be different and confuse the oldies? And bless 'em, they always think they are the first to do this!

  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    In the unlikely event of encountering anyone young enough to say this, my reply would be - One. Thirteen. Forty-two. One point one seven.
  • HarryCHHarryCH Shipmate
    How about "23 skiddoo"?
  • carexcarex Shipmate
    MMM wrote: »
    ….but comes from the ?15th century rivalry between the Merchant Taylors and another livery company for precedence. It was decided they should alternate between 6 and 7. I think they still do.

    Or so I was told when I was a Livery Company person (not one of the Great Twelve, a modern one).

    MMM


    Or perhaps not...

    Chaucer used the phrase a century earlier.
  • kid: 6 7
    adult: Wow, that's tall.
    kid: ********
  • mousethief wrote: »
    kid: 6 7
    adult: Wow, that's tall.
    kid: ********

    Our almost two-year-old toddler grandson is 3ft 4 in. Rule of thumb is a boy will be twice as tall as he is when he is 2 years old. I think I will give him a basketball for his second birthday. Can't start too young.
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    I’ve just remembered a dreadful song from the 70s called Car 67 about a taxi driver who had just been dumped by his girlfriend
  • MMMMMM Shipmate
    Oh, Carex, that’s interesting, thanks.

    MMM
  • MiliMili Shipmate
    The kids I teach have brainwashed me. I'm watching the Ashes cricket test on TV and saw Nathan Lyon's jersey number 67 and immediately thought 6-7 😵‍💫

    One of my pentecostal friends told me the kids can't stop saying it because the rapper who wrote the song it originally came from has put a demonic spell on the children to control their minds. It's true he practises Santera and that his songs are highly innapropriate for children, but that sounds a bit of a far theory. On the other hand the children do seemed compelled to say it!
  • Mili wrote: »
    The kids I teach have brainwashed me. I'm watching the Ashes cricket test on TV and saw Nathan Lyon's jersey number 67 and immediately thought 6-7 😵‍💫

    One of my pentecostal friends told me the kids can't stop saying it because the rapper who wrote the song it originally came from has put a demonic spell on the children to control their minds. It's true he practises Santera and that his songs are highly innapropriate for children, but that sounds a bit of a far theory. On the other hand the children do seemed compelled to say it!

    I remember similar claims about Rock and Roll records when they first came out. Rock and Roll itself has certain sexual innuendos. But it seemed the more the claims were made, the more the records sold. Kids are that way. Anything to aggravate older generations.
  • NPR's "It's Been A Minute." had a very good discussion on this topic. You can listen to the podcast or read the transcript.
  • I'm not aware of this phenomenon here in Spain but it seems to me to be a kind of coded backlash against adult authority. A kind of fingers in ears "la la la I'm not listening/don't have to listen to you".

    AFF
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    Brummie taxi controllers were saying it back in the late 70s
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    NPR's "It's Been A Minute." had a very good discussion on this topic. You can listen to the podcast or read the transcript.

    Thank you @Gramps49 - that was interesting.
  • Boogie wrote: »
    The kids are using this to annoy/bamboozle the adults.

    Have you come across it yet?

    Oh yes. Some of us like to tweak the kids by including those numbers at every available opportunity.

    As kid fads go, it's not a bad one - it's way way better than when sixth grade babies were running around saying "Hawk Tuah".
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