Results for “brain rot”
Low-quality, hyper-online content that melts your brain — and the slang it spawns.
Spending a long stretch lying in bed doing nothing — as deliberate rest or a low-energy slump.
A meaningless brainrot sound used as a dismissive or playful tag at the end of a sentence.
A meaningless brainrot filler word from Skibidi Toilet, used to mean good, bad, or just for chaos.
Mature content — open to view.
An AI brainrot character that's half crocodile, half bomber plane — a pillar of the Italian brainrot meme.
An AI-generated brainrot character — a shark in sneakers — and a flagship of the 'Italian brainrot' wave.
Mature content — open to view.
An Indonesian-origin brainrot character — a wooden log creature with a bat — from the AI meme wave.
A drawn-out 'case oh!' shouted as a reaction in gaming and brainrot clips.
A nonsense brainrot catchphrase kids shout while waving both hands up and down like scales.
Northern term for your younger sibling — usually a brother, sometimes any close family.
Korean for 'older brother' used by men — fandom-speak for the elder male members.
A mystical 90s-witchy aesthetic — crescent moons, velvet, crystals, tarot, and a dreamy dark-romantic vibe.
Japanese for 'stop it', adopted by anime fans as a meme of mock protest.
Disgusting, dirty, or rotten — Irish for properly grim.
The stereotypical fitness guy — protein shakes, mirror selfies and 'we go gym' energy.
Verlan for 'pourri' (rotten) — specifically a corrupt cop on the take.
Korean for 'older brother' used by women — turned into stan-speak for an older male idol.
Japanese for 'big brother' — affectionate in anime, but a loaded meme online.
"Brother" or "mate" — a casual British term of address for a friend.
Head or brains — from loaf of bread = head; use your loaf means think.
A big-forehead emote meaning a galaxy-brained, super-smart play or idea.
A sarcastic GI groan about a raw, rotten situation — the 'what a deal' nobody actually wanted.
An affectionate term for a close friend or brother, rooted in Jamaican Patois.
Scottish for going at something full-throttle, with everything you've got.
London term for 'brother' or 'bro,' borrowed from the Arabic word for brother.
A swear-on-it phrase meaning 'I promise, on my brother's life.'
Mature content — open to view.
Verlan for 'frere' (brother) — used for a literal brother or, like 'bro', a close friend.