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2020 Year in Review: The Slang That Netizens Slung This Year

Zeus Zou theBeijinger 2021-02-08

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As author Rita Marie Brown once said, "Language is the road map of a culture. It tells you where its people come from and where they are going." Thus, an examination of the many shifts that Chinese culture has undergone in this tumultuous year would be incomplete without a peek into the latest additions to the language – also known as slang – as told through research from several media organizations and linguistic study centers.


逆行者 nìxíngzhě People who walk against the flow



There is no Deus ex machina in this world, only common folks who stand up and stand out


This word usually refers to individuals who sacrifice themselves to the point of danger in the service of others. Although the phrase wasn’t created this year, it has been widely and consistently used during 2020 to praise the extraordinary contributions made by medical staff and those who work in frontline industries. 


集美 jíměi Concentrated beauty, the name of a city in Fujian Province



Those who call you sister may not be your BFF but online streamers who want to get into your wallet


The term went viral this year when an e-commerce streamer mistakenly pronounced 姐妹 jiěmèi sister as jimei. Netizens soon picked it up and started calling their besties by this name. Some people also consider this term as an abbreviation for "集美貌与才华与一身的女子 jíměimào yǔ cáihuá yǔ yīshēn de nǚzǐ a woman who combines beauty and talent."


后浪 hòulàng The latter wave



Despite rooted for the prosperous youth culture , this video was criticized for only featuring middle-class and urban people


This phrase comes from the proverb "长江后浪推前浪" chángjiāng hòulàng tuī qiánlàng the latter wave of the Yangtze River pushes the former ones, which is meant to demonstrate the unstoppable power of the younger generations. In 2020, this phrase was used in a promotional video produced by Bilibili, the leading video content platform that focuses on youth lifestyle. The video rooted for the young, zealous, and hardworking generation and claimed they will be the hope and future of China.


打工人 dǎgōng rén The working class



The harder you work, the better life your boss will have


A tongue-in-cheek phrase that is frequently used among young office workers who have come to the realization that their career is not really about self-achievement but merely playing the role of gear in a larger capitalist machine. However, certain e-commerce platforms and segments of the entertainment industry were quick to deconstruct its meaning, making it just another label in the era of consumerism.  


网抑云 wǎng yì yún NetDepression Music



When you're running out of emo energy, open NetDepression Music to recharge


Music fans will be quick to recognize that this phrase is derived from the NetEase Music app, one of the major music streaming platforms here in China. 易  ease is replaced by 抑 yì depressed because the users of this platform tend to leave exaggerated depressive and emotional comments under the music late at night.  


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内卷 nèi juǎn Involution


A term from the field of anthropology that refers to the phenomenon of an industry or entity faced with a lack of any break-through progress which therefore begins to focus on trivial refinement. Among Chinese netizens, this phrase reveals the brutal yet unproductive internal competition between individuals, corporations, and industries, all of which are also considered a source of pain for many dagongren in modern society.


凡尔赛文学 fán'ěrsài wénxué Versailles literature 



"I have never gotten paid since the Alibaba Group was founded, nor had interest in the money. The happiest time of my life was when I earned RMB 91 per month as a teacher," said Jack Ma


This is not a reference to actual French literature but instead comes from a celebrated historic romance manga from Japan, The Rose of Versailles. Its extremely foppish artistic expression echoes middle-class fantasies among common folks. This slang was first forged when a netizen called 小奶球 Xiaonaiqiu was summarizing the emerging phenomenon of humble-bragging on Chinese social media. To become a qualified Versailles literati, you need to master the art of showing off by introspection and self-deprecation, with a splash of superiority for good measure, ala Marie Antoinette and “Let them eat the cake.


小朋友,你是否有很多问号? xiǎopéngyǒu, nǐ shìfǒu yǒu hěnduō wènhào? Kid, you must have a lot of questions?



We probably all had this expression at some point during 2020


This is a line from the lyric of Jay Chou’s ballad, “Listen to Mother’s Words." It was a question Jay Chou asks a younger version of himself as he remembers wondering why he had to study and practice playing the piano while other kids were out enjoying themselves. In a year when reality exceeded any of the darkest corners of our imaginations, this struck a chord with many netizens.


‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍尾款人 wěikuǎn rén Final-payment people



The first payments versus your due balance


In this year’s 11.11 shopping bonanza, to stimulate sales, Alibaba Group started the pre-sale as early as the latter half of October and allowed netizens to place an order with a small down payment. The various deals and brain-melting campaign rules were a welcomed distraction from bill payments for dagongren. However, the thrill of snapping up bargains was soon replaced by the regret of irrational shopping as the deadline for paying up the balance approached, turning these shoppers into weikuan ren people who must shoulder tons of final payment bills.


READ: 2020 Year in Review: 12 Restaurant Openings That Tickled Our Taste Buds This Year



Images: Ce.cn, Bilibili, 17qq, NetEase Music, Juduo, Sohu, the Paper, Storyfree, Iheima



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