Wednesday, October 22, 2025

"6-7" is just so, well, 6-7

I don't believe I've ever actually heard it myself, but apparently "6-7" is the meaningless phrase du jour.

For some time now, kids have been shouting out "6-7" whenever it seems appropriate (e.g. page 67 in a book, a basketball player who is 6'7", 6 minutes to 7 o'clock) or, increasingly, for no reason whatsoever. Because that's kind of the point of it: it has no point.

According to legend, it started from a tune by Philadelphia rapper Skrilla called "Doot Doot (6 7)", which may or may not be a reference to the police code 10-67, which is used to report a death. Rather than "Doot doot" becoming a catchphrase, which it might well have done, the "6 7" part caught the imaginations of a bunch of young people, and gradually became amplified through TikTok and other social media, as these things do (c.f. "skibidi", "rizz", etc, etc)

Teachers report hearing it hundreds of times each day. It just seems to have tickled the funny bone of young people, and established itself as a kind of shorthand for "cool" and "in", despite, or maybe because of, its complete lack of logic or meaning. It is an example of what linguists call "semantic bleaching", where a word or phrase become completely divorced from its original meaning.

Some teachers have even started using (or deliberately misusing) it themselves, in the full knowledge that it is not supposed to be used by "grown-ups", as a way of defusing and de-legitimizing it, hoping it will just go away as a result.

The outcome of that particular ploy remains inconclusive, but there are rumours that the next craze phrase may be "4-1", again for absolutely no reason.

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