this post was submitted on 17 Dec 2025
47 points (100.0% liked)
Linguistics
1759 readers
12 users here now
Welcome to the community about the science of human Language!
Everyone is welcome here: from laypeople to professionals, Historical linguists to discourse analysts, structuralists to generativists.
Rules:
- Instance rules apply.
- Be reasonable, constructive, and conductive to discussion.
- Stay on-topic, specially for more divisive subjects. And avoid unnecessary mentioning topics and individuals prone to derail the discussion.
- Post sources when reasonable to do so. And when sharing links to paywalled content, provide either a short summary of the content or a freely accessible archive link.
- Avoid crack theories and pseudoscientific claims.
- Have fun!
Related communities:
- !linguistics_humor@sh.itjust.works
- !languagelearning@sopuli.xyz
- !conlangs@mander.xyz
- !esperanto@sopuli.xyz
- !japaneselanguage@sopuli.xyz
- !latin@piefed.social
Resources:
Grammar Watch - contains descriptions of the grammars of multiple languages, from the whole world.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I found a third one in an instance yours doesn't federate with. But it's that sort of fun word you can use for a lot of different compounds and derivatives; like, if I were to say "slop TV", "memeslop" or even "sloppification", even if you never saw any of those, you'd immediately get what I mean. That's the rizz of it, I think.
(Wait... isn't that "no cap"? By asking, I may have just broken the coolness of the trend, and I am okay with that.)
"To cap" is to lie, to exaggerate, to bullshit. It can be also used as a noun; "that's cap" = "that's bullshit". Originally AAVE slang.
So "no cap" = "honestly, saying the truth".
I understood that "no cap + rizz" as "seriously, this is cool".