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      • It was the era of the beat generation (Jack Kerouac’s term for a movement of young people who rejected the established social norms; 1952), the angry young man (one at odds with prevailing beliefs and conventions; the term became attached to the British playwright John Osborne in 1957), and the crazy mixed-up kid (1955), of the kitchen sink (symbolic of domestic squalor portrayed by artists and writers; 1954) and the coffee bar (first seen in the early 1900s but became popular in the late...
      www.oed.com/discover/words-from-the-1950s/
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  2. Jul 16, 2021 · The slang of the 1950s reflected the mood of the decade. It is fair to say that 1950s slang was a vernacular that became a primal language for teenagers who sought independence and liberation while also continuing to reflect the traditional values and lifestyle of the times.

    • Mary Gormandy White
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  3. Words from the 1950s. In the nineteen-fifties, the culture of youth came of age. It had been bubbling up in the United States in the nineteen-forties – the era of bobby sox (ankle socks worn by teenage girls; 1943) and bobby-soxers (adolescent female fans; 1944), of zoot suits (with long jackets and tapering trousers; 1942) and crew-cuts ...

    • Michele Debczak
    • Beatnik. These days, the term beatnik defines the most prominent subculture of the 1950s, but the word wasn’t coined until 1958. That year, columnist Herb Caen added -nik (a suffix derived from the satellite Sputnik, which launched in 1957) to beat to describe members of the Beat generation.
    • Cool. Originally part of African American Language (a.k.a. African American Vernacular, or AAVE), cool emerged from the jazz scene in the 1940s. In the 1950s, it became mainstream with the youth of America.
    • Backseat Bingo. The 1950s saw the explosion of American car culture, and with it came a wave of new car-related slang terms. Backseat bingo referred to hanky panky that took place inside a vehicle.
    • Pad. Though pad can refer to any place of residence today, it had unsavory connotations in the mid-20th century. A 1950s beatnik may have used the term when referring to a place to crash, or a room to use (or recover from having used) drugs.
  4. Aug 10, 2021 · The 1950s were the heyday of the Silent Generation, those born before and during World War II, when the United States was both at the height of its power while also launching into a Cold War. The modern idea of the ’50s is that it was a buttoned-up time when everyone believed in family values and “the American way.”

    • Daddy-O. Your daddy is your actual father, but your daddy-O is just a generally cool dude… Who for some reason you're calling daddy. Example: "Whatever you say, daddy-O!"
    • Made in the shade. Today, being in the shade means you're avoiding sun damage to your skin. But in the 50s, being made in the shade meant things are going well for you and you don't have a care in the world.
    • Ginchiest. A way to tell somebody you admire their appearance or personality. And for more fun facts, here are 20 New Words Introduced in 2017. Example: "Baby, you're the ginchiest!"
    • Burn rubber. No point in having a hot rod if you're not going to show off its speed. And when you press that pedal to the metal, your tires are gonna burn some rubber.
  5. In the 1950s, hot-rodders and Beats were a source of inspiration. Some of the slang terms below were actually insults that are still used today. People would use phrases like “square” to mock someone who was conventional or uncool, or call someone a “drip” if they were considered dull or boring.

  6. Jan 27, 2017 · 1950s Slang: 15 Delightful Words And Phrases We Should Bring Back. Lifestyle. Published Jan 27, 2017. By. Jess Catcher. Every era has its own unique charm that sets it apart. On top of evolving...