Gen Alpha Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Gen Alpha. Here they are! All 6 of them:

Heading out on my baecation <3 See you all in 2 weeks!
Archer Webb (What's That Slang?: 152 Gen. Z and Gen. Alpha Terms and Definitions for 2023)
He’s suspect. He says he’s not gay, but all his likes are of shirtless men.
Archer Webb (What's That Slang?: 152 Gen. Z and Gen. Alpha Terms and Definitions for 2023)
He’s so woke that he’s protesting for LGBTQ+ rights in front of the Capitol.
Archer Webb (What's That Slang?: 152 Gen. Z and Gen. Alpha Terms and Definitions for 2023)
Charles se contenta de la dévisager. - Tu le sais ça, n'est-ce pas ? La plupart des gens t'évitent, mais ceux qui sont sans défense et meurtris, c'est comme s'ils se glissaient peu à peu dans ton ombre. Là où tu ne les remarqueras pas trop... Et tu tiens les mauvaises choses à distance. Il ne disait toujours rien. Elle boutonna son jean, puis s'avança de deux pas pour se presser contre lui. - On le sait, lui chuchota-t-elle. Nous qui avons été blessés, on sait à quoi ressemble le mal. On sait qu'on est en sécurité avec toi. Il ne dit rien, mais il passa les bras autour d'elle et elle sut qu'elle lui avait dit quelque chose qu'il ignorait... et que ça comptait pour lui.
Patricia Briggs (Dead Heat (Alpha & Omega, #4))
This book tells the story of what happened to the generation born after 1995,[9] popularly known as Gen Z, the generation that follows the millennials (born 1981 to 1995). Some marketers tell us that Gen Z ends with the birth year 2010 or so, and they offer the name Gen Alpha for the children born after that, but I don’t think that Gen Z—the anxious generation—will have an end date until we change the conditions of childhood that are making young people so anxious.[
Jonathan Haidt (The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness)
This is is why so many algospeak euphemisms are specific to the online domain of use. Words like “sewerslide” and “seggs” are understood as shared vernacular in the algospace. To use them is to recognize that they are pieces of the social media sociolect and culture. The “brainrot” genre, especially, relies on shared folklore. Each word is only funny when it refers back to the running history of other brainrot words. Memes are necessarily understood in the context of other memes; terms like “skibidi” are popularized as postironic nods to the very culture that spawned the overuse of niche comedic references.
Adam Aleksic (Algospeak: How Social Media Is Transforming the Future of Language)