Loading...
Loading...
27 terms in this category
Party & Social Life groups slang entries connected to party, social, celebration contexts. Use this topic page as a guided browsing path, not as proof that a term has a single origin, universal meaning, or verified popularity outside SlangWatch.
Party & Social Life can vary by platform, region, age group, and community. A term that feels playful in one setting may feel rude, dated, sensitive, or confusing in another, especially when it moves from private conversation into public posts, classrooms, brand copy, or family discussions.
The entries below are selected by tag overlap, so they should be treated as related reading rather than a complete category. Open the individual slang page for meaning, tone, risk notes, examples, and correction links. If a detail is missing, avoid filling the gap with guesses about origin or popularity.
For parents, educators, and creators, the safest approach is to read for context first. Ask who used the word, where it appeared, whether it targeted anyone, and whether the speaker was being sincere, ironic, affectionate, or hostile. Understanding slang does not require repeating it, and plain language is often better when the context is sensitive.
Fire Friday; TGIF (The Golden Friday, referring to a fun Friday night).
Party; gathering; hangout (often a regular one).
A derogatory term for an unkempt and socially awkward man, often associated with internet culture.
Food and drinks (humorous/informal term often used in party/event contexts, referring to the "food and refreshments" item on an agenda).
Friend; close accomplice; partner in an activity (from Malay).
Making a scene, being loud, or partying hard to show off.
A condescending or preachy older person (often a boss or teacher) who insists on being right because of their age.
Insider; a popular, social person who is always up to date with trends.
Outsider; someone who is socially awkward or prefers to be alone (opposite of inssa).
Fire Friday; equivalent to "TGIF." Used to describe a wild or fun Friday night.
Fun, entertainment, or gossip; also used as a greeting like "What's the craic?" meaning "How's it going?".