Preview

Word Fleek Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
702 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Word Fleek Analysis
What happen to the days when people spoke and you didn’t have to type it up on Google to find out what they are saying to you? I understand and speak Ebonics myself, but my nieces, nephew, and my children’s generation had taken it to a whole new level of words that are not even in the English dictionary. They toke two completely different words combine together only to form a whole new word. Not like when I was growing up where we took the words and just change its meaning and sometime played on the spelling of the word.
In the 90’s Men used to say to women you look phat in those jeans. Which he is, she is looking pretty hot and tempting which he expressing how good she is looking in what she is wearing. If she didn’t understand what he was
…show more content…
Peaches Monroe posted a video on June 21, 2014 where she was heard by millions all over the word saying these words “We in this bitch. Finna get crunk. Eyebrow on fleek. Da fug.” Some say the word fleek came from combining fly and sleek together to form a completely new word. The Word fleek is not found in our dictionary and it proven hard to find any reliable source to agree on its meaning or origin. Alex Russel wrote a blog on the “Fleek: A Definitive History.” The blog gave two possible meanings of what fleek could possible mean. It stated the word fleek was founded in an old Welsh-English dictionary from 1803, written by a man named William Owen Pughe. Which defines fleek to be a translation of Mwythus which means puffed up, fleek, delicate or nice. Another source that he says it located fleek in a book name “Plutarch’s Lives” written in the 1st Century, translated fleek as sleek as it pertain to its passages. …show more content…
You can find it use in advertising by I Hop to describe how there pancakes are on fleek. Some celebrities such as Ariana Grande has been heard singing a cappella song about on Fleek from its original vine video. Little did Peaches Monroe know when she posted her vine video that she would resurrected such an ancient word that would cause so much controversy over its origin and meaning? Fleek and its complex origin is here to stay whether you would like to use the 1803 version by William Owen Pughe or the 1801 translation of “Plutarch’s Lives” that was written in the 1st century which translate it as to mean sleek. Fleek is one of the top trending word for now. However you use it or however you translate it fleek is always going to be on

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    The word comes from the French sceptique,1 which in French is pronounced sep-teek. It has taken several spellings since coming to English in the 16th century, but the modern British spelling was settled by the early 19th…

    • 349 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Daimi Daor Monologue

    • 821 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Daidi Daor, Today is the last day. Tomorrow we are finally leaving this town we call home. And we will be leaving so much behind, but mostly you. It’s been a year since you’ve died now, but I haven’t forgot you. Every morning I miss the smell of your coffee being heated, and every night I miss your shadow by the fire.…

    • 821 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Hobbit Shake Guide

    • 6602 Words
    • 27 Pages

    habit and hob. The word is probably best seen as a blend of rabbit and hob, an obsolete British…

    • 6602 Words
    • 27 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In Summer Words of a Sistuh Addict the sudden change in rhythm and tone is used to display the pleasure and pain the user receives when they get high. This poem describes the first time a user shot dope and the positive and negative feelings that arose from the hit. The tone and rhythm gradually change from calm and collected at the beginning to jumbled slang phrases in the end. Lines 1-13 have a more structured rhythm and thought whereas lines 14-26 have choppy sentences and words. As the high progresses, the tone changes from anger to sadness. The user was mad at her mother and decided to shoot some dope to alleviate the stress and pain. As you get towards the middle of the poem, the tone becomes happy has she experiences the high that “..felt…

    • 158 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In today’s African American community, many speak and use a different form of “standard” English. Ebonics is a form of English that was established by the early US slaves in search of a reliable means of communication. During slavery, there were laws which mandated that any person caught teaching a slave to read or write could be fined and/or put in jail. This left them to fend for themselves and create their own form of communication. As time has progressed, the Black slag, known as Ebonics, is recognized by many as a less sophisticated form of English. From a linguistics stand point, the use of this slang leads to a negative reflection on the people within the African American culture. And it should be noted, this can be said for any culture within a society’s norms for language. The use of Ebonics merely handicaps the African American society and limits their success and respectability among the educated world due to its negative connotations and…

    • 1307 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Alvarez discusses retroculturation, reaching back and reconnecting with traditions that haven’t been celebrated in generations. She describes Latino retroculturation by saying the first generation tries to do everything possible to assimilate into the new culture. The second generation wants to grow up completely American; some even refuse to learn Spanish. The third generation feels completely American, but they feel like they want to reconnect with their Spanish roots. “They make a concerted effort to hold on to their traditions, to establish cultural ties with their past” (Alvarez 46). The same can be said for blacks using “slang” language. The spelling, or misspelling, of words isn’t just a style; it has roots in history. Going back to the 1800’s “hip-hop misspellings don’t just reject select bits of standard white written style… writers ridiculed Negro speech with exaggerated misspelling” (Savan 373). For hundreds of years now we went through the retroculturation cycle with spelling of words. By misspelling words to make them appear cooler, people aren’t just being unique; they are following a past…

    • 1156 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” the author uses clothes as a symbol to reveal our protagonist and antagonist individualities. Connie who is our protagonist is a fifteen-year-old girl who has the habit of craning her neck to glance into mirrors. Connie wears a pullover jersey blouse that looked one way when she is home and another way when she is away, in where she wears shorts. In the text, it states that “They must have been familiar sights walking around the shopping plaza in their shorts and flat ballerina slippers that always scuffed the sidewalk, with charm bracelets jingling on their wrist” (Oates 836). In other words, Connie uses clothes to look attractive, and mature by older men by wearing short clothes, most importantly she believes she is pretty, which also plays a role in her actions and the kinds of clothes she wears. Whereas, the…

    • 428 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    John Updike's poem "The great Scarf of Birds" describes a scene that the speaker sees while standing on a golf course in October (autumn, just like Yeats). Unlike Yeats, Updike sees these birds only once and was never indending to see them at all. These birds appear in a "lady's scarf" like formation. There were so many birds that "a cloud appeared, a cloud of dots" (line 16). Updike use more complex diction than Yeats does. Updike uses words like; "transparent trees" (line 7), "paper undulates" (line 18) and "negligently tossed" (line 47) That help the reader see how monstrous this flock of birds was and the dark effect their appearence had on the…

    • 1251 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    1920 peeps

    • 1269 Words
    • 6 Pages

    [T]he dictionary set me right by defining the word as a fledgling, yet in the nest, and vainly attempting to fly while its wings have only pinfeathers; and I recognized that the genius of 'slanguage' had made the squab the symbol of budding girlhood.3…

    • 1269 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Definition of Ratchet

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages

    “Ugh, she so ratchet,” a common phrase when hitting the club or scrolling through any social media site. No, they’re not referring to the mechanical tool or the beloved Transformers character, their inferring to the new slang term that has established itself within a generation’s vocabulary. But how exactly does an everyday term such as ratchet become so twisted to the point where it’s new meaning no longer resembles it’s old one? As it once was mainly known as a mechanical tool used to repair clocks and roller coasters, it now has a entirely different definition. Although words may have an established meaning, as time goes by, that meaning may change, perhaps into something that is completely irrelevant.…

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ebonics Debate

    • 1041 Words
    • 5 Pages

    It is clear there are many issues in our school system that must be addressed. However the use of Ebonics, African American Vernacular English, in the English curriculum is not one of the solutions. Using Ebonics as part of our kids’ curriculum is not only unfair to the forty percent of kids who are not African American, but it also does injustice to all the students by not focusing on teaching them Standard English, which is used in higher education and by most employers.…

    • 1041 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Duck Hunting

    • 1137 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In the earliest of time, duck hunting was essential. Indian tribes would use canoes and dogs to catch ducks to feed their families. They would leave early in the morning to beat the sunrise and get out on the water. Ducks were hunted in January and February when they’re fat for better feeding. Then, in the 1800’s the breach-loading shotgun was created for field sports. This allowed duck hunting easier because now they are easily shot in flight instead of canoeing. The shotgun is quickly reloaded so that more duck can be hunted in a single setting. Ducks and other birds have great eyesight, which made them harder to be hunted so the creation of camouflage came about. Hunters would wear clothes to blend in with the trees, grass, and environment surrounding them. They then began building duck blinds out of wooden frames and screened with brush and grass so that the hunter would be hard to see. Then, in the 1960’s decoys were made from carved and painted wood to float in the water. They are spread out so that ducks are encouraged to land on the water. Finally, we have the duck call. This was created to mimic many sounds of ducks so that they will land in the spread of decoys for easier an easier kill.…

    • 1137 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The History of Bowling

    • 2238 Words
    • 9 Pages

    The word bowl could be derived from the Saxon bolla and the Danish bolle, which translated to a spherical object. Another theory is that the word originated from the Latin bulla , or the French boule, both meaning "ball." Bowling has been known by many different names: bowls, skittles, kegling, ninepins, Dutch pins and quilles. (Pezzano 13)…

    • 2238 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    American Settlers

    • 2173 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Besides bows and arrows they developed the blowpipe. This was a long, thin, wooden tube into one end of which was placed an arrow dart; the hunter put the other end to his mouth and gave a sharp, strong blow through the tube. This forced the dart to shoot out. Many birds were caught in this way, and after shooting them the hunters put the colourful feathers in their hair, and through their ears and noses. There was no need for warm animal hides and so they roamed through the forests naked, with perhaps only strips of leaves around their waists for…

    • 2173 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Some history is that the word originates from the French circa 1300. There was an earlier relation…

    • 456 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays