Via DaFuq!?Boom!Life & Culture / NewsLife & Culture / NewsSkibidi! Trad-wife! Delulu! What can we learn from the words of 2025?The Cambridge Dictionary has added thousands of new words in 2025, with an emphasis on how internet culture is changing the English languageShareLink copied ✔️August 18, 2025August 18, 2025Text Thom Waite Among the list of new words added to the Cambridge Dictionary in 2025, two of the standouts include “skibidi” and “tradwife”. In other words, the Cambridge Dictionary has finally confirmed what we’ve all come to suspect: life is getting more nonsensical, and more regressive – lovely news. It’s also, as experts at the dictionary point out, increasingly dominated by internet culture, which we can see transforming the English language in real-time. The full list contains thousands of words added to the dictionary over the course of 2025, including new labels for our dysfunctional political system – “broligarchy” – and terms, like “snackable” content, to describe our plummeting attention spans. Other changes include updates to existing words, like “red flag” and “green flag”, which have taken on more romantic connotations in recent years. The words that have made the most headlines, however, are “skibidi”, “tradwife”, and “delulu”. At first glance, these might not seem like they have too much in common, but each can be traced back to pervasive memes that emerged, and spread, online. “Delulu” for example – which the dictionary defines as “believing things that are not real or true, usually because you choose to” – is traced back to K-pop fans, whose use of the word spread via Twitter and TikTok. 'Skibidi' has been added to the Cambridge Dictionary.Yes you are living in this timeline.https://t.co/5cGeaRB0mspic.twitter.com/LVfZFm0l1t— LambdaGeneration (@LambdaGen) August 18, 2025 “Skibidi” is slightly harder to define, as “a word that can have different meanings such as ‘cool’ or ‘bad’, or can be used with no real meaning as a joke”. One of the examples offered by the Cambridge Dictionary reads: “That wasn’t very skibidi rizz of you.” But its popularity is easier to attribute, spread via the viral machinima series Skibidi Toilet (soon to be adapted for the big screen by Michael Bay). “It’s not every day you get to see words like ‘skibidi’ and ‘delulu’ make their way into the Cambridge Dictionary,” says Colin McIntosh, its lexical programme manager. But, he adds: “We only add words where we think they’ll have staying power... Internet culture is changing the English language and the effect is fascinating to observe and capture,” The addition of “tradwife” also speaks to a more profound cultural and economic shift, embodied by social media influencers like Nara Smith or Hannah Neeleman (AKA @ballerinafarm). In case you’re unfamiliar, these personalities often advocate for women returning to more domestic duties, whether that’s part of a backlash to modern work standards, a belief in traditional families and childcare, or just to glamourise marrying rich. But, as Dazed’s Serena Smith wrote earlier this year: “Often the tradwife discourse misses the fact that, for most, this way of living is sheer fantasy, the reserve of a few TikTok influencers who, in any case, are performing for their cameras and have their own money stashed in the bank.” This is probably worth remembering, as the lifestyle enters the dictionary and gains a little bit of added legitimacy. If you think it’s a viable way to live in 2025, you might just be delulu. Skibidi rizz, etc. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.TrendingNude awakening: Meet the young people embracing naturismAt a time of toxic beauty standards and widespread body image issues, could taking your clothes off around strangers (in a non-sexual way) be the answer?BeautyArt & PhotographyThings To Come: Porn saves the world in Maja Malou Lyse’s ‘bimbo sci-fi’ PolaroidArt & PhotographyThree Dazed Clubbers on documenting a complete digital detoxLife & Culture9 tips for surviving post-grad lifeLife & CultureIs Gen Z the most psychic generation yet?FashionHow Indian designer Diya Joukani became the coolest girl on the internetBeautyWho would we be attracted to if we didn’t know what we looked like? Beauty10 of the hottest Instagram accounts fusing art, sex and eroticaBeautyThe sexiest flesh-baring Instagram accounts you need to followEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy