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Youthquake
The Word of the Day
for May 25, 2007 was:
youthquake • \YOOTH-kwayk\ • noun - : a shift in cultural norms influenced by the values, tastes, and mores of young people
Example Sentence:
The dot-com industry was the epicenter of the youthquake of the 1990s. Did you know?
The 1960s were a time of seismic social upheaval brought about by young people bent on shaking up the establishment. From politics to fashion to music, the ways of youth produced far-reaching cultural changes. Linguistically, the sixties saw the addition to English of such words as "flower child," "peacenik," "hippie," "love beads," "trippy," "vibe," "freak-out," and "love-in." Not surprisingly, they also saw the emergence of "youthquake." The first known use of "youthquake" in print comes from a 1966 article in McCall's: "the youthquake, as some call it ... has swept both sides of the Atlantic."