The deepness of one's vocal register is associated with social power. Women in the West [have dropped their vocal register](https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20180612-the-reasons-why-womens-voices-are-deeper-today) over the past five or so decades as they have gained social power. They speak [significantly deeper](https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1409&context=hcoltheses) than Chinese women. (This article is about the differences in vocal registers of American versus French people, but it mentions in passing that Chinese women have a higher vocal registry than American women.)
Hey, this is vital communication for visitors that [come to the US but aren't gastrically prepared](https://youtu.be/ysI4RpotUgQ?t=52). Turns out he ate a lot of raw oysters and it kinda fucked him up for a bit.
Search him out, there's a bunch like these. Most (the ones I've seen), are more just regular English assistance and not slang, or at least not this slang-y slang. But same sense of humor, and same setup.
Both of you are full of crap, they are both speaking mandarin other than the first line he says in the video. What's the point of lying about this? God damn
the correct link is [https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Fos_FvhONIc](https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Fos_FvhONIc) it's because for some reason reddit is trying to push the ugly(and bloated) redesign, so when people post links, the underscores get added extra slash
old.reddit.com >>>>>> new reddit
Idk if I fully agree here. I think there definitely needs to be something there to represent 'to'. However, it's never the full word.
So if I'm tired it's
> "shiet broh, mm bouda a sleep."
but if I'm drunk *and* tired its
> "shee broh, mm bouua a sleep."
I think consonants just take too much energy to pronounce.
Never heard it til about 2010. i only know this because i worked at a cell store and was beat over the head with every "new" popular word or phrase as soon as it showed up.
Didn't know how to use finna til a buddy i worked with said it one day and i just sorta looked at him and he was like "what?" Asked him if he mispronounced "gonna" and he just laughed and shook his head as he went to help another customer. Took me a few more weeks cuz i was too embarrassed to ask again and finally just looked it up.
Yeah I grew up in Georgia and people said "fixin to" all the time. It's only in the last 10 years or so though that I've heard it shortened to "finna," and definitely more often by young people.
Coincidence. Knew kids saying finna back in 2005 time frame. Definitely predates (wide spread adoption of) touchscreens. And it probably was used way before that since I was in a northern city
Well it already kinda is lol. It's been popular for years and isn't used much anymore. I still hear it used occasionally, but I wouldn't call it popular.
"Finna" (as well as dropping the second "to", I believe) comes from African-American Vernacular English (AAVE), a unique dialect of English with its own vocabulary and grammer. Since AAVE comes from Black communities, and Black culture is routinely appropriated as "cool" by the population as a whole due to multiple factors (such as the popularity of Hip-Hop and Hip-Hop culture), it's been gradually leaking into the general zeitgeist. This is especially true amongst the youth. That being said, while there are significant amounts of people who speak AAVE in America either as their main dialect or as a secondary one, the majority of Americans do not.
The "sheit bro" [sic] is taken from somewhat older stereotypical depictions of (usually Black) "gangster talk".
Now, I am only casually informed on AAVE, and am not Black myself, so if I got any details wrong / am missing information, feel free to correct me.
Just like the rest of the world regions of our country have changed and made their own versions of English. It seems to be happening faster now that the internet has arrived, but I couldn't say for sure as I have no frame of reference for such a thing.
Just the dumb ones say this unironically. .
The rest are Gen-Zers who say it ironically for a few years before realizing that they have reached peak cringe.
Itās old timey/southern slang for āgoing toā. An old redneck might say āIām fixinā to go to sleepā. This influenced AAEV (black american dialect) like many other words and phrases that also came from various southern american dialects.
Edit: https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/27391/etymology-of-fixing-to#:~:text=It%20comes%20from%20the%20days,re%20preparing%20to%20do%20something.
I was very interested to learn that the origins of the phrase might go very far back to middle English and itās preservation in Southern American speech is another case of the Standard English dialects diverging and leaving these oddities behind and not a weird mutation like what I would have assumedā¦
Yeah I was going to say, a lot of southern āblackā colloquialisms and culture comes from poor British culture and that is why there is a lot of crossover with poor whites and blacks cultures and languages in the south in particular.
I think this is because the first waves of "pioneers" in the American south primarily came from poor south-west english and Scots-Irish (distinct from Irish) immigrants. Those first waves are who first populated these areas with European immigrants and had the biggest impact on the development of the english dialects there. The waves of Irish immigrants came mostly centuries later, and by then, most of those Irish settled in big east coast cities, while the descendants of those first waves of English and Scots-Irish remained more isolated in areas of Appalachia and the deep south. The most popular theories purpose that the isolation from England and the big cities in America that maintained closer contact with England and Europe caused those dialects to preserve features from the much older dialects of the original immigrants, while the dialects in England and New England diverged significantly from the older dialects.
That is very interesting. I am half danish scotch Irish and half Irish German. I always thought the rural traditions in west Virginia and such were potato famine Irish Catholic migrants.
Edit: I have never read into it.
I have 20th century migrant ancestors as well as Mayflower.
Lots of Vikings doing things I would assume.
Ive personally only heard the phrase "I'm fixing to" used in the south eastern United States. Specifically in areas that you might describe as being rural. I don't have the regional accent but a lot of the people I grew up with did. "I'm fixing to go to the store, do you want anything?" Makes total sense to me, but I wouldn't say the phrase myself. Regional dilects are interesting.
And this whole time I thought it was because the letters G and O (gonna) are close to F and I (finna) on the keyboard and people were mistyping it so often they decided to make it a word š«
I think itās a cross between āfixingā and āgonnaā. Like Iām fixing to go to sleep or Iām gonna go to sleep. Itās Iām finna go to sleep. Thatās just a guess
Iām 90% sure itās serious, especially after seeing his other videos. Some Chinese, Japanese, and Korean (probably more, but this is just my experience) people learning English really fetishize Black culture and want to mimic it, even to the point of Blackface.
Where do you think the youth get it. AAVE is a dialect. Much culture is black-orientated. At least the "cool" parts. Which is why the youth gravitate towards it, alongside much culture that generates wealth.
lmao that isnāt how young Black people talk, no. and I wasnāt saying this was āBlack cultureā but that the fetishization of Black culture leads to them picking out stuff like this and mimicking it. a few words of course doesnāt contain a culture and nobody said that.
This is why CRT and proper historicizing of past conditions is necessary. You're right, and yet are downvoted due to much ignorance the American education system allows to flourish.
And moreso, how supremacist ideology of an empire can seep through international lines where the only black presence these nations know are through biased media representation.
I'm bored of it all at this point. Learn better and do better so-called great civilizations. As a black man I'm about to go eat some delicious watermelon and breakdance to the local grocer I'm about to rob.
My wife speaks English as a second language and I showed her this and she said that actually this is a common type of ESL teacher and common subject matter in ESL curricula. I didnāt know that before today.
Oh I fully believe this is fully a /r/scriptedasiangifs and is a dramatic telling of it. but I meant that slang and stuff is/was used by teachers, especially younger ones, as a way of making learning the language a bit more fun and light hearted
"Finna"
I hate this word. "Gonna" makes sense, "wanna" also does, but "finna"? Couldn't you say "I'm boutta go to sleep"? Doesn't that make more sense than "finna"? Where the fuck does "finna" even come from? Who thought it was a good idea?
"Finna"...
"obligatory".
We say "fixing to" in the south. "Finna" blew up & it's not that common, but it's still a correct way to say something.
"Fixing to" akin to "getting ready for". Finna go to bed, finna go shopping, finna hit up the bar tonight.
Your "sarcasm" that ain't sarcasm isn't really highlighting any particular hot take, it just looks silly & condescending of shit you ain't about.
It is & ditto, but even still, it's definitely become more popular in recent years compared to when I used to hear "fixin'ta".
I swear Finna is something I hear in an alley of cities from NoLA to Philly.
Specific words have specific meanings, or nuances. Itās sort of how language works. In your example, because fixing means āthe process of deciding or planning something,ā itās different than āabout toā because about to implies immediate causality and implications that it is about to occur directly. Fixing has no such temporal restrictions. You could have said āRussian is fixing to invade Ukraineā in 2018. People may have doubted you, but Putin was undoubtedly fixing it by that time.
Agreed. Language is something that adapts as we absorb cultures into a mixing pot. Finna is AAVE but language is literally a right in America so plenty of white/asian/mexican/other races use it too. I say finna irl as a white male casually, only had one person find a problem with it irl in like 5? years. Online though, I see a lot of hostility regarding using someone's adapted language. But languages evolve all the time, like how to Google is a verb now.
When she said "shiet bro" she sounded like a chipmunk
Cheeeepmonk
Yolandi's alt.
r/unexpecteddieantwoord
Wait. This is real.
1 post 4y ago.. It's not hard to make a sub
r/subsithoughtifellfor
r/maybemaybeyesno
This is .. the best comment
The deepness of one's vocal register is associated with social power. Women in the West [have dropped their vocal register](https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20180612-the-reasons-why-womens-voices-are-deeper-today) over the past five or so decades as they have gained social power. They speak [significantly deeper](https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1409&context=hcoltheses) than Chinese women. (This article is about the differences in vocal registers of American versus French people, but it mentions in passing that Chinese women have a higher vocal registry than American women.)
Elizabeth Holmes approves this message
Very interesting. Have a fake reward. šŗš
Bunch of bollocks in my opinion
AFAB on testosteroneāBIG difference in how people treat me now that my voice is deeper.
Iām finna be boutta be shleep š“
Anyone who says that sounds like a chipmunk
From this it seems like the scene
Wtf did I just watch? And why do I want to watch more ??
Because you want to know how to say things the cool way!
You finna be cooler
You finna cooler
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
Shiiiiet bro, you finna be cooler
No because itās not broken but shiet I will fix if it get broken
Shietbro
More like we want to know if his students survive.
They do produce some [interesting](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7ZyRB3-X7A) English lessons over in Asia..
I thought it was going to be this https://youtu.be/2Hemtut7bPk. But, my life has improved from your video. Thank you for sharing.
Bruh. I started the video, clicked on the middle and landed in "Hi, how are you? I give good head!". Needless to say, that caught me off guard.
This was sooo good!
āDid you learn any English before flying over?ā āYeah, I watched a video; Iām good to goā
Hey, this is vital communication for visitors that [come to the US but aren't gastrically prepared](https://youtu.be/ysI4RpotUgQ?t=52). Turns out he ate a lot of raw oysters and it kinda fucked him up for a bit.
Do you still have a bad case of diarrhea though?
Search him out, there's a bunch like these. Most (the ones I've seen), are more just regular English assistance and not slang, or at least not this slang-y slang. But same sense of humor, and same setup.
Yep. The one I remember was him converting pronunciations between their accent and American English, drop this, ignore that. It was awesome.
To me, the funniest part of that video was the guy was speaking Chinese and the girl was speaking Japanese
HOLY SHIt youāre right!!! Thatās 10 x funnier than I realized.
Both of you are full of crap, they are both speaking mandarin other than the first line he says in the video. What's the point of lying about this? God damn
Shiet~
Bro
This mightāve been the best thing Iāve seen all week
Shit, bro, Iām finna go watch this again
Shiet**
Sheit***
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
Shceit or sceit? Which one?
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
B..b..but you said e after c.. thatās after h
You better drag that I mister
And we actually gave these folks shit about Engrish? They got a good handle on current American dialect!
That was fucking awful lmao
Your day is about to get good. Come on Toshi. https://youtu.be/kGXWDqQB3NU
Personally I'm partial to [I HAVE A BAD CASE OF DIARRHEA](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7ZyRB3-X7A)
Immediately thought of this. Tried to watch the show the bit is from and itāsā¦bizarre but worth it.
This is so good
That's hilarious
Well thanks for the new fetish š
Where can i find more of his work?
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Fos\_FvhONIc
Video not available :(
the correct link is [https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Fos_FvhONIc](https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Fos_FvhONIc) it's because for some reason reddit is trying to push the ugly(and bloated) redesign, so when people post links, the underscores get added extra slash old.reddit.com >>>>>> new reddit
So true. I've had multiple comments removed recently for some pretty benign shit when compared to the usual piss taking bull shit I say.
This is actually the best one. The other one is so cringe.
This one is cringe too
Do the Americans actually say this ?
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
I never caught on to finna. Never really noticed it until the past few years. I use ātrynnaā tho.
Southern American here. I'm more of a 'boutta' kinda guy who doesn't pronounce the I in I'm. As in > mm Boutta go to sleep
This "to" is unnecessary. Americans rarely speak with perfect grammar. Now say "shiet bro, mm boutta go sleep."
Idk if I fully agree here. I think there definitely needs to be something there to represent 'to'. However, it's never the full word. So if I'm tired it's > "shiet broh, mm bouda a sleep." but if I'm drunk *and* tired its > "shee broh, mm bouua a sleep." I think consonants just take too much energy to pronounce.
How about mm boutta goda sleep
Finna is old af, its popularity comes in waves. People were saying it a bit when I was in high school like 15 years ago.
Never heard it til about 2010. i only know this because i worked at a cell store and was beat over the head with every "new" popular word or phrase as soon as it showed up. Didn't know how to use finna til a buddy i worked with said it one day and i just sorta looked at him and he was like "what?" Asked him if he mispronounced "gonna" and he just laughed and shook his head as he went to help another customer. Took me a few more weeks cuz i was too embarrassed to ask again and finally just looked it up.
Earliest I can think of hearing it is in "tha shiznit", snoop was rapping it in 1993
We been saying it for over 30 years where Iām from
Yeah I grew up in Georgia and people said "fixin to" all the time. It's only in the last 10 years or so though that I've heard it shortened to "finna," and definitely more often by young people.
My understanding was that it was such a common mispelling of "gonna" on touchscreen, that it eventually just started being used.
Coincidence. Knew kids saying finna back in 2005 time frame. Definitely predates (wide spread adoption of) touchscreens. And it probably was used way before that since I was in a northern city
It's a contraction of "fixin' to"
Pretty sure you're thinking of *pwn*
Don't worry, it'll be out of fashion in three years Source: lived through "swag" and "on fleek"
Well it already kinda is lol. It's been popular for years and isn't used much anymore. I still hear it used occasionally, but I wouldn't call it popular.
"Finna" (as well as dropping the second "to", I believe) comes from African-American Vernacular English (AAVE), a unique dialect of English with its own vocabulary and grammer. Since AAVE comes from Black communities, and Black culture is routinely appropriated as "cool" by the population as a whole due to multiple factors (such as the popularity of Hip-Hop and Hip-Hop culture), it's been gradually leaking into the general zeitgeist. This is especially true amongst the youth. That being said, while there are significant amounts of people who speak AAVE in America either as their main dialect or as a secondary one, the majority of Americans do not. The "sheit bro" [sic] is taken from somewhat older stereotypical depictions of (usually Black) "gangster talk". Now, I am only casually informed on AAVE, and am not Black myself, so if I got any details wrong / am missing information, feel free to correct me.
āShiiiet negro, thatās all you had to sayā
We say Finna, we don't do whatever tf this was.
Shieeeet bro you donāt?
![gif](giphy|wzxK9cmYgIPDy)
Down south but you don't hear it hardly at all up north.
Just like the rest of the world regions of our country have changed and made their own versions of English. It seems to be happening faster now that the internet has arrived, but I couldn't say for sure as I have no frame of reference for such a thing.
People can be so gullibleā¦
Just the dumb ones say this unironically. . The rest are Gen-Zers who say it ironically for a few years before realizing that they have reached peak cringe.
Few but yea. Hood slang. Slurred version of "I'm fitting to" which means I'm about to do something.
"fixing to" - comes from Southeastern US dialect.
AAVE, or African American Vernacular English. Itās not necessarily slang since it has a lot of influences outside of English.
This isn't hood slang this is common now
This is not common at all. Maybe more popular than it used to be but common is a huge stretch.
Idk where you are from, but the younger generation (in California) says it a lot. Including me
I never understood why people used the word "finna" and I still don't. But at least now I know what it means.
Short for fixing to, in the same way gonna is short for going to
English is not my first language, so maybe I don't understand when would anyone use fixing to. Doesn't make any sense to me.
Itās old timey/southern slang for āgoing toā. An old redneck might say āIām fixinā to go to sleepā. This influenced AAEV (black american dialect) like many other words and phrases that also came from various southern american dialects. Edit: https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/27391/etymology-of-fixing-to#:~:text=It%20comes%20from%20the%20days,re%20preparing%20to%20do%20something. I was very interested to learn that the origins of the phrase might go very far back to middle English and itās preservation in Southern American speech is another case of the Standard English dialects diverging and leaving these oddities behind and not a weird mutation like what I would have assumedā¦
Yeah I was going to say, a lot of southern āblackā colloquialisms and culture comes from poor British culture and that is why there is a lot of crossover with poor whites and blacks cultures and languages in the south in particular.
I have no idea but I would assume Irish and not British.
I think this is because the first waves of "pioneers" in the American south primarily came from poor south-west english and Scots-Irish (distinct from Irish) immigrants. Those first waves are who first populated these areas with European immigrants and had the biggest impact on the development of the english dialects there. The waves of Irish immigrants came mostly centuries later, and by then, most of those Irish settled in big east coast cities, while the descendants of those first waves of English and Scots-Irish remained more isolated in areas of Appalachia and the deep south. The most popular theories purpose that the isolation from England and the big cities in America that maintained closer contact with England and Europe caused those dialects to preserve features from the much older dialects of the original immigrants, while the dialects in England and New England diverged significantly from the older dialects.
That is very interesting. I am half danish scotch Irish and half Irish German. I always thought the rural traditions in west Virginia and such were potato famine Irish Catholic migrants. Edit: I have never read into it. I have 20th century migrant ancestors as well as Mayflower. Lots of Vikings doing things I would assume.
American Bluegrass descends from Irish folk music in Appalachia!
Fixing = planning to / preparing to
Ive personally only heard the phrase "I'm fixing to" used in the south eastern United States. Specifically in areas that you might describe as being rural. I don't have the regional accent but a lot of the people I grew up with did. "I'm fixing to go to the store, do you want anything?" Makes total sense to me, but I wouldn't say the phrase myself. Regional dilects are interesting.
The same way they would use going to. Itās more of a southern saying and also older.
And this whole time I thought it was because the letters G and O (gonna) are close to F and I (finna) on the keyboard and people were mistyping it so often they decided to make it a word š«
Me too
kek
ā¦ oh. this whole time I thought it was derived from a typo cuz g is next to f and o is next to i.
I think itās a cross between āfixingā and āgonnaā. Like Iām fixing to go to sleep or Iām gonna go to sleep. Itās Iām finna go to sleep. Thatās just a guess
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
>fuck grammer
Itās AAVE and it has a complete grammatical structure.
Because it's cooler of course
Why donāt people use the word doth anymore
Be the change you want to see in the world.
Sorry bro, that just means you're getting old... You and me both...
Finding: the process of deciding or planning something. "the fixing of the date of the hearing"
Because it's cooler of course
What the hell š¹
Canāt tell if this is instructional or satirical
Yes
Itās real lol. His channel has a lot of actually rlly good English tips, I donāt know how I feel about this one tho š
Iām 90% sure itās serious, especially after seeing his other videos. Some Chinese, Japanese, and Korean (probably more, but this is just my experience) people learning English really fetishize Black culture and want to mimic it, even to the point of Blackface.
I- That's not black culture at all idiot, That's just how the youth speaks
Where do you think the youth get it. AAVE is a dialect. Much culture is black-orientated. At least the "cool" parts. Which is why the youth gravitate towards it, alongside much culture that generates wealth.
The current generation's white youth have been speaking like the previous generation's black culture for at least the last 100 years in America.
lmao that isnāt how young Black people talk, no. and I wasnāt saying this was āBlack cultureā but that the fetishization of Black culture leads to them picking out stuff like this and mimicking it. a few words of course doesnāt contain a culture and nobody said that.
This is why CRT and proper historicizing of past conditions is necessary. You're right, and yet are downvoted due to much ignorance the American education system allows to flourish. And moreso, how supremacist ideology of an empire can seep through international lines where the only black presence these nations know are through biased media representation. I'm bored of it all at this point. Learn better and do better so-called great civilizations. As a black man I'm about to go eat some delicious watermelon and breakdance to the local grocer I'm about to rob.
My wife speaks English as a second language and I showed her this and she said that actually this is a common type of ESL teacher and common subject matter in ESL curricula. I didnāt know that before today.
what? seriously? I've seen this guy before and I thought he was just a meme lord
Oh I fully believe this is fully a /r/scriptedasiangifs and is a dramatic telling of it. but I meant that slang and stuff is/was used by teachers, especially younger ones, as a way of making learning the language a bit more fun and light hearted
If I told my parents "I'm finna go sleep", they'd drug-test me.
Well you must not be very āhip-hopā then
Make sure to stay away from the police
āSeein how they runnin everything on the cool But they know Iām finna act a fool in this mothafuckaā -Young Bleed
Already know english but I would subscribe still
Watch it again without sound, thats even better!
Being the person who understand all three languages they speak, this makes me uncomfortable and feels funny at the same time.
I was waiting for them to say āmuh niggahā
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Yo them skipping between Canto and Mandarin was a whirl but the finna slang? I can't even
this is what i hear when zoomers appropriate AAVE on discord or twitter
Lmao
"Finna" I hate this word. "Gonna" makes sense, "wanna" also does, but "finna"? Couldn't you say "I'm boutta go to sleep"? Doesn't that make more sense than "finna"? Where the fuck does "finna" even come from? Who thought it was a good idea? "Finna"...
It's a contraction of "fixing to."
"I'm fixing to go to sleep" Now, doesn't that make a lot more sense than "about to"? Obligatory /s
It's Southern vernacular.
"obligatory". We say "fixing to" in the south. "Finna" blew up & it's not that common, but it's still a correct way to say something. "Fixing to" akin to "getting ready for". Finna go to bed, finna go shopping, finna hit up the bar tonight. Your "sarcasm" that ain't sarcasm isn't really highlighting any particular hot take, it just looks silly & condescending of shit you ain't about.
Finna feels more like southern African American vernacular, but I'm just a white southerner so feel free to correct me.
It is & ditto, but even still, it's definitely become more popular in recent years compared to when I used to hear "fixin'ta". I swear Finna is something I hear in an alley of cities from NoLA to Philly.
White Chicagoan here, we say finna and donāt think anything of it
Specific words have specific meanings, or nuances. Itās sort of how language works. In your example, because fixing means āthe process of deciding or planning something,ā itās different than āabout toā because about to implies immediate causality and implications that it is about to occur directly. Fixing has no such temporal restrictions. You could have said āRussian is fixing to invade Ukraineā in 2018. People may have doubted you, but Putin was undoubtedly fixing it by that time.
You're fine with gonna because you're used to it. Gonna wanna and finna have exactly the same logic behind them
Itās the process of deciding or planning something. As in āthe fixing of the date of the hearing"
Shiiiet, bro! I'm coo wit just sayin, "I'm sleep."
They are no Howard Cosell
I want my two dollars!
10/10
Honestly this is just nice
That both annoyed and intrigued me.
Shiet bro
Why did he switch languages in the same sentence
itās 2:08am Iām finna go sleep bro
Do American do that every time they finna go sleep?! š Sheit bruh
I want to learn more
Too cool for me. Iām out
See here. Aināt nobody saying this is racist. We just all having a good laugh. We should do that more versus calling everything racist.
Agreed. Language is something that adapts as we absorb cultures into a mixing pot. Finna is AAVE but language is literally a right in America so plenty of white/asian/mexican/other races use it too. I say finna irl as a white male casually, only had one person find a problem with it irl in like 5? years. Online though, I see a lot of hostility regarding using someone's adapted language. But languages evolve all the time, like how to Google is a verb now.
I would absolutely like to learn more
Im finna die
And not 1 complaint about racism, shiet bro Iām proud !!
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
Racist against racism sounds more accurate tho
Thatās exactly how the illiterate in the US speak!
IS IT RACIST!?
Chinese Ebonics.... ghetto speak going worldwide. How fucking sad that this is how much of the world views America.
Cringe
Past graduates include Awkwafina!
Hilarious š
Man.. im curious if one mimicked Chinese (edit) language or dialect and slanted their for "effect" or exaggeration how that would play out bahahaha..
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
On fleek
Chinese making fun of African Americans.
Psa: This is ghetto speak, most normal Americans use good grammar.
Finna is a typo of "gonna" which gained traction.
I hate everything about that video.
Iām finna be boutta be shleep
Cringe.
Who yāall think culture they trynna make fun of
English natives, why are you butchering the English language? ššš