Showing posts with label #Expressions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Expressions. Show all posts

Saturday, January 10, 2026

The 6 7 Phrase Phenomena – By Barbara Baker

 

I was playing goalie in the basement with two grandsons when, out of the blue and between my screeching at their high-speed wrist shots, someone shouted, “How old are you, Gramma?”

I put my hands up to stop the game. “How old do you think I am?”

Without hesitating, the youngest said, “Fifty-two.” He just became my favourite eight-year-old.

I threw my gloves and stick down, rushed over and gave him a hug.

“Did I guess right?” He wiggled out of my arms. “You’re fifty-two?”

“No.” I smiled. “I’m not. But I love that you think I am.”

“Well then, how old are you?” asked his big brother.

“I’m sixty-seven.”

They froze. Their eyes got round. Their mouths made perfect o’s. I glanced back and forth between them because their expressions were confusing me. What in the world had I said this time?

“Gramma,” the oldest one shouted and then did this weird hand waving motion. “You’re 6 7.”

“Yup, I’m sixty-seven.”

“No, Gramma.” He shook his head. “You’re 6 7. That’s so cool.”

And then the pucks started flying again and I retreated back to the net silently gloating at my apparent 6 7 coolness.

When I got home, I did some research to figure out what this expression meant so I could truly appreciate my new status.

Trusty Google had a plethora of facts and trivia to sift through. These are abbreviated versions of the ones that caught my attention:

  • The expression started from a Philadelphia rapper, Skrilla, who used repetitions of 6 7 in his song Doot Doot (6 7) but he states he never intended there to be a specific meaning to the numbers.
  • The expression grew legs in late 2024 and became more popular in 2025. 

  • Generation Alpha (born 2010 and later) are the prime users. 

  • People often use it when they hear the numbers 6 and 7 – i.e. a teacher says, "open your textbooks to page 67" or someone says, “do you want to get together at 6 or 7 o’clock". The response is an exuberant “6 7!” 
  • Often when 6 7 is said, the user moves their open-palmed hands up and down alternately (like a weigh scale). The gesture can mean ‘it’s like this, it’s like that’, ‘it’s so, so’ or ‘it is what it is’. That was the weird hand movement my grandson did.
  • Some teachers ban it’s use in the classroom because of the commotion it causes amongst the students. 

  • According to Dictionary.com it is the Word of the Year because of its widespread cultural impact. Their definition of 6 7 is ‘a burst of energy that spreads and connects people long before anyone agrees on what it actually means.’ 

  • The saying is a meaningless inside joke to indicate you’re part of a group and to exclude older generations who have no idea of its insignificance. 

  • Adults who try to seek a logical definition make the joke funnier to the kids who use it. 

Well, that last one stopped me in my tracks and temporarily diluted my coolness status. But it also took me down another rabbit hole to see what the nonsensical expressions were back in my day.

 

I might have been heard chuckling when I reviewed the list.

    Nonsensical expressions from the 70s

  • Catch you on the flipside
  • Do me a solid
  • Dream on
  • Gimme some skin
  • Put a cork in it
  • Up your nose with a rubber hose (my all time favourite)

Nonsensical expressions from the 80s

  • Gag me with a maggot
  • Grody (to the max)
  • As if!
  • Gnarly
  • Rad
  • Psych

It’s fun and funny how expressions change with each generation. I now have more appreciation for my parents who navigated through our slang without the aid of Google and still managed to have conversations with us. And I love the eye roll or head shake I get from my adult children when I intentionally drop an oldy. I’m sure they must think ‘Mom must’ve been pretty rad back in the day.’

Putting all research aside, for the next few months, I’ll continue to bask in my 6 7 coolness.

Happy New Year.

A group of books with text

AI-generated content may be incorrect. 

Summer of Lies by Barbara Baker — BWL Publishing

What About Me? by Barbara Baker — BWL Publishing

Jillian of Banff XO — BWL Publishing

Baker, Barbara - BWL Publishing Inc. (bookswelove.net)

Barbara Baker Author Page Facebook 

 

 

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Old Sayings and Chickens - Barbara Baker

 

My grandson hiccupped and said, “Who’s thinking about me?”

I turned to him. “Who taught you that saying?”

“You did.” He rolled his eyes. “You always say it.”

Well, blow me over. The fact anyone remembers what I say surprised me, let alone someone so young. And his response made me smile because I still ask the same question whenever I get the hiccups.

Once again, I trip down the Google rabbit hole but this time to find out where the saying came from. This is what I learned:

Folklore says getting the hiccups means someone is talking about you or missing you. It continued to say the trick to stop the hiccups was to go through all the people in your head and when you hit the culprit the hiccups would stop.

My mother never told me that part of the saying. Next time I get the hiccups, instead of holding my breath, I’ll recite names. Who knows, maybe someone important is thinking about me.

Since I was in research mode anyways, and because my grandson is responsible for this procrastination adventure, I check into the saying out of the mouths of babes. It owes its origin to Psalm 8:2 KJV where God ordains strength out of the mouths of babes. Today, the phrase has changed to praise a young person who speaks wisely. 

Here’s a good line for my procrastination endeavors – don’t put off until tomorrow what you can do today. Benjamin Franklin created the original phrase - never leave that till tomorrow which you can do today. That’s a tough one to abide by when procrastination mode is in full gear.

Don’t count your chickens before they hatch is said to be from the Aesop Fables although there is no confirmation of that. Hmm. I thought Google knew all.

You’re no spring chicken originated in the 1700s when farmers needed to sell their chickens while they were young and tasty. If they couldn’t sell them, they’d age through the winter and be less profitable. I’m not sure how I’ll react the next time I hear someone use the expression. It will probably depend on what time of year it is.

It seems chickens take a lot of heat as far as old sayings go. Here’s another one:

In the 1920s in the United States, a chicken dinner from a casino cafeteria cost under $2. And $2 was the standard bet for gamblers. When someone won a bet, they could buy a chicken dinner hence the phrase winner winner chicken dinner. Well, that one surprised me. My grandkids say it every time they win at cards or soccer or running races. I was positive they were the originators.

The knowledge I acquire when I procrastinate boggles my mind.

Here's a final one which has nothing to do with chickens, but you might think about it before you go to bed tonight.

Waking up on the wrong side of the bed is said to be a Roman superstition. They were always careful to get up on the correct side to ensure that good luck would follow them throughout the day. If they got up left foot forward or on the wrong side of the bed, they believed they would be surrounded by negative energy and have an unlucky day of it.

I hope you got up on the right side of the bed and have minimal hiccups throughout your day. Enjoy the September weather. Winter is always just around the corner in Alberta. 

Summer of Lies: Baker, Barbara:9780228615774: Books - Amazon.ca

What About Me?: Sequel to Summer of Lies : Baker, Barbara: Amazon.ca: Books

Jillian of Banff X0 | Universal Book Links Help You Find Books at Your Favorite Store! (books2read.com)

 

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