The generation that follows generation Z who are currently turning 16 (as of 2020). They are dubbed Generation AA or Generation "After Aidan" because they, like him, are in recovery due to having millennial parents. Aidan-Adam Ouch is the last known individual born into Generation Z.
Each generations surviving hope is that the Flynn Effect may benefit them where the previous had fallen short.
#generationaa #millennial #flynneffect #flynn
#generationafteraidan
Each generations surviving hope is that the Flynn Effect may benefit them where the previous had fallen short.
#generationaa #millennial #flynneffect #flynn
#generationafteraidan
The kids of Generation After Aidan are screw because Millenials and Generation Z left nothing great to be carried on.
Generation AA lived through Covid-19
Generation AA lived through Covid-19
by MillenialHope April 27, 2020

The secratary of defence for the United States and a retired 4 star marine general. He is a totally raw mother fucker and stacks bodeis miles high. His knife hand killing radius that succeeds anything to ever exist on this earth. he has seen the worst of human nature and lives to tell about it.
by DUDE_JUST_ STFU March 8, 2017

The best Church in Yuma, Arizona. Said to be on the verge of sparking world wide revival. These members and leaders live an on-the-edge radical lifestyle and run with a vision known as G12. You may join in with them, or read about them later.
by disciplemaker July 14, 2009

Generation Y is harder to define. The only reason for that is that we are still involved in it and therefore still doing research. (By the way, whenever I say, "we," I mean we. Me and my friends have spent long hours thinking through all this stuff.)
Generation Y started fresh off the crash/burn of Generation X; a kind of rise from the ashes. Generation Y involved anyone who attended/completed high school between 1997 and now. Most of those heavily involved in GenY have had an older sibling heavily involved in GenX. GenY has suffered a divide, unlike our predecessors, in that few groups of people ever come together against something. Associations are limited. There is an abundance of us, however. Our younger siblings may end up being a Generation Z, but that remains to be seen.
Generation Y still have competition from a second wave of Gen-Xers. The new Gen-Xers are in typical fashion of days of yore, but with contemporary styles. Generation Y pervades this, but all in all lives alongside it. Generation Y kids tend to be more vocal about things, but usually do less.
Drug use is still rampant, that's for sure.
More will be added as research is developed. Bear with us.
Generation Y started fresh off the crash/burn of Generation X; a kind of rise from the ashes. Generation Y involved anyone who attended/completed high school between 1997 and now. Most of those heavily involved in GenY have had an older sibling heavily involved in GenX. GenY has suffered a divide, unlike our predecessors, in that few groups of people ever come together against something. Associations are limited. There is an abundance of us, however. Our younger siblings may end up being a Generation Z, but that remains to be seen.
Generation Y still have competition from a second wave of Gen-Xers. The new Gen-Xers are in typical fashion of days of yore, but with contemporary styles. Generation Y pervades this, but all in all lives alongside it. Generation Y kids tend to be more vocal about things, but usually do less.
Drug use is still rampant, that's for sure.
More will be added as research is developed. Bear with us.
Generation Y started in '97, possibly climaxed in '03, the stagnation of the culture became evident in '05, and may be ending this year, if not next year.
by Bozenda January 5, 2006

A derogative term calling something chaotic, uncontrollable, and a general mess. The term refers to the channel #doors-general on the ROBLOX Discord server for the ROBLOX game DOORS, which is notable for being incredibly active, filled with children under the age of 13 (the legal age required for you to sign up for Discord), and incredibly chaotic, with lots of racism and discrimination being thrown around.
"Hey Bob, I made a new invention!"
"holy shit Jim that's a #doors-general get that out my fucking face"
"holy shit Jim that's a #doors-general get that out my fucking face"
by mopade February 25, 2023

a generation of humans raised to communicate with social media and generaly has a more important life on social media than in real life and typically lacks in real world knowledge and interactive communication and very poor social skills. and since theyve never known any other way of meeting new people they will snapchat afriend to find out the persons snapchat name of who they want to meet. and they find this way of breaking the ice to be much easier but they typically build up a snapchat relationship with that person and never end up making friends with the individual or ever talking to the person at all in real life
hey ive been wheeling that new girl at school pretty hard on snapchat but i walk by her in the hall way she doesnt even look at me but she still snaps me everyday after school why is this? well my friend she is part of the snapchat generation.
by greasemagnet125 May 8, 2016

When you are generalized for the town you live in and not for your actual circumstances. Usually very annoying for people who get generalized this way. A lower middle class person may be just able to afford a small apartment or house in a rather affluent area and then they get generalized as rich. Or a rich kid may live in a decent neighborhood of what is considered a bad area. These rich kids usually use this to make themselves seem hard or ghetto while the kids with the opposite problem are tired of the generalizations.
Wealthy kids who happen to live in okay areas of Mount Vernon, parts of the Bronx, Queens or Brooklyn are seen as hood but a kid who lives in a one bedroom apartment with his whole family who just happens to live in some wealthier town in Westchester of Long Island is considered soft. town generalization sucks
by moconahhh August 26, 2013
