It means staying at home and doing day trips.oh yes staycationing, especially as people use it to say they are going on holiday somewhere else in the UK as opposed to going abroad. It makes the trip sound less appealing.
If you’re going away somewhere for a break within the UK it’s still a holiday. Just because your going to Cornwall rather than Barbados doesn’t mean your holiday is any less a holiday.
Staycation to me means you are staying at home and not going anywhere
Also the word "empower" I just don't get it.The phrase sweet fanny adams - which means nothing or gone off meat. she was a real girl in the 1860s whose body was chopped up by a man after she was abducted. Look up her story -it’s really sad.
it's always... "Positive Vibes ONLY! No DrAmA!! "Positive vibes
No just piss off with that talk
Whaaaat !!"Unalive" instead of die/kill - has become incredibly overused and trendy, partly because people fear getting their social media accounts "shadowbanned" if they use the actual words
You see it a lot on social media "omg I have a test tomorrow and I want to unalive myself" "I will unalive my neighbour if I hear her car alarm again." It's so annoyingWhaaaat !!
seems to be everywhere on tiktok with teenagers talking abotu their mental health issuesYou see it a lot on social media "omg I have a test tomorrow and I want to unalive myself" "I will unalive my neighbour if I hear her car alarm again." It's so annoying
TikTok sometimes takes videos down if they use certain words in the on-screen text and that's one of them, I think this is part of why it's caught on so fastseems to be everywhere on tiktok with teenagers talking abotu their mental health issues
It's a horrible word and it reminds me of the word "Undead" brrrr!TikTok sometimes takes videos down if they use certain words in the on-screen text and that's one of them, I think this is part of why it's caught on so fast
You are correctI’m not sure if this counts, but I hate it when people say “The proof is in the pudding.”
No the expression is “The proof of the pudding is in the eating.”
If you are going to use a saying, at least get it right!
As you were…