Can You Complete These Slang Phrases From The '90s?

By: Lauren Lubas
Estimated Completion Time
3 min
Can You Complete These Slang Phrases From The '90s?
Image: RyanJLane/E+/Getty Images

About This Quiz

The 1990s gave us some great things, like chokers, flared jeans (lord help you if you called them bellbottoms), belly chains ... wait a minute ... It's clear that the 1990s was easily the most uninspired, unoriginal decade when it came to things like fashion. Those of us who grew up in that time were basically told that tie dye had been done, chokers went out of style for a reason, and wearing next to nothing was something people discovered they could do in the '60s. As a matter of fact, the only decade the '90s didn't try to steal from was the '80s, which were totally bashed at the time. 

While the 1990s wasn't an excellent way we expressed ourselves through fashion and makeup choices, we did find individualism in our music ... and our words. The slang of the 1990s took the words of the decades before and completely changed them. The great part about it was that slang was no longer isolated to regions of the country, because it was found everywhere (especially MTV ... which was still cool, and sometimes still played music in the '90s), and it spread through the media and the Internet with the communication age. So, if you were around for the '90s (or you just have an obsession with that decade), you probably know a thing or two about the slang that was available. It's time to test your skills, and try to complete these slang phrases from the '90s.

Let's start simple. Do you think you're all that and a bag of ______?
Chips
Pics
Sticks
Wicks
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

When something was all that and a bag of chips, it was better than great, it was the best. It had more going for it than you could imagine. Imagine if you had a pot of gold and a unicorn. Now imagine all that with an additional bag of chips.

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When you were done listening, you'd tell someone to talk to the ______.
Middle finger
Hand
Face
Butt
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Talk to the hand, because the face ain't listening was a great way to shut someone down if they were acting like a fool, being annoying, or trying to disrespect you. It was the perfect way to disrespect them before they even had a chance.

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If your friend is acting like a complete idiot, you might call him a fart-______.
Knocker
Fart
Flip
Burp
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

A fart-knocker was the term used to tell someone they were acting stupid or like an idiot. The phrase originated from the show "Beavis and Butthead," two teens who liked to watch MTV.

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This might be a great nickname for a very close friend: Home _______.
EE
Skillet
Lock
Security
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Home skillet was a derivative of home fry, homey, and home boy. Home is a safe place, a place that you return to and love, and you associate your best (oldest) friend with home. The skillet comes from the fact you can fry things on a skillet.

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"I'm _____" something you say when you're leaving.
Peaced
Laters
Leaving
Outtie
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

When you were outtie, you just had to go. It was usually something you announced only if you were in the middle of a conversation, and you had to cut someone short. However, some people used it every time they got up from the lunch table.

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Here's another thing you might say as you're leaving: "I'm ______."
Laters
Audi 500
Peaced
Maced
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Yes, "outtie" soon turned into Audi simple from assimilation of the sounds. Of course, this phrase then evolved into a heavily marketed model: the Audi 500. The phrase worked, for a short time.

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When you were losing your mind, you were going ______.
To the bin
On a trip
To the farm
Postal
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

While this phrase has a dark origin, it was the 1990s way of showing that you went crazy. Several postal workers in the 1990s took out their frustrations in the workplace with violent activity, and that's where this phrase came from.

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Cut. It. _____.
On
Out
With scissors
Up
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Joey from "Full House" really brought this one to the spot light. He'd always say it, complete with sign language. It basically mean to stop what you were doing, usually in a funny way.

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Finish this exclamation that shows you're surprised: Oh, _____!
Snap
Flap
Wack
Shack
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The exclamation wasn't just to tell people you were surprised, it also told everyone that they should be surprised too. For example, if someone who was bullied finally stepped up and took down said bully, someone might shout "Oh, snap!" because they didn't expect that, and no one else should have expected it either.

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When you wanted someone to back off, you might have said ______ off.
Back
Step
Whip
Check
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Step off meant a little more than back off, it was basically a way to warn someone who was trying to pick a fight that you weren't in the mood. It was a push-back phrase that told people you were ready to fight if they didn't walk away.

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If you needed details, you'd probably ask someone "what's the ____?"
News
9-1-1
4-1-1
Deats
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Back in the 1990s, when the Internet wasn't around to help us look up phone numbers, we would dial 4-1-1 for directory information. It gave quite a bit of details about people's lives, so when someone wanted gossip, they'd ask for the 4-1-1.

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To show someone encouragement, you'd say "You ____, Girl!"
Live
Go
Set
Win
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

You go, girl! or You go, boy! were great ways to tell people that you supported what they were doing and you were proud of their efforts. Of course, this soon turned into a sarcastic phrase, and eventually was said when people did things you didn't approve of, but you didn't really care.

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If you wanted to tell someone that they're cray cray, you'd say "You _______".
Trippin'
Sippin'
Crickin'
Crazin'
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

If someone is freaking out over something or they were acting crazy, you would tell them that they were trippin.' This soon became a great way for people to tell their significant others that no cheating was happening ... because that would be crazy.

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"This car is ______ awesome," is one way to tell someone they have a very awesome car in the 1990s.
Super
Very
Hella
Neat
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

"Hella" basically meant very, but it was a much cooler way to say very. It could be used in nearly any context, but soon the term was shown to be pretty stupid when Eric Cartman couldn't stop saying it in an episode of South Park.

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When you wanted to say something was the opposite of what you just said, you'd say, "_____."
NOT
Opposite
Cray
Chill
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

This one was made famous by the movie "Wayne's World," in which the main character, Wayne, would yell NOT to emphasize his sarcasm for the statement he just said. "Wayne's World" also brought us words like "Schwing!" in the '90s.

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If your friend was mad at you, you might tell them to "stop acting so _______."
Garlicky
Peppery
Salty
Witchy
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Being salty in the '90s was your way of being grumpy. It was a nice way to tell people that they were acting very close to a female dog in heat. These days, we might tell people not to feel so butthurt.

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You might say, "That's my name, ____________," when someone called for you by name.
What of it?
Stop saying it
Don't wear it out
But I'm going to change it
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Of course, we may have first heard this on Pee Wee's Big Adventure, but it really became a staple in the '90s as a way to sarcastically respond to someone who was annoying you beyond belief.

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People would say this when they were way too young to say it. "Back in the ______."
War
Day
Summer
'60s
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Back in the day, people said "back in the day" to begin sentimental sentences about how their lives used to be. The trouble with this phrase was that it was used to talk about things that happened a couple of years prior to the conversation.

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"That bathing suit is totally ______" would be something you say to someone who had a really awesome bathing suit on.
Whipped
Flippin'
Bangin'
Stanky
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

The most common use of the term "bangin'" is for someone who has a perfect body. When someone told you that you had a "bangin' bod" it meant that they were very interested in looking at you without your clothes on.

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This was a great way to say "in your face" in the 1990s: "_______-ya!"
Soo
OOh
Coo
Boo
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

BOO-ya! was an exclamation that was mostly used to pronounce a win or that someone was proven correct in an argument. It was most often used by middle and high school students who wanted to run their skills in people's faces.

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If you messed up something, you'd probably say this: "My ____."
Bad
Mistake
Oopsie
Fart
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Usually, "my bad" was reserved for minor infractions, like bumping into someone or messing up a math problem. However, in the movie "Clueless" we see it used when someone hits a parked car. Yes, you should have left a note.

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When you wanted to acknowledge someone for their help, you'd give them "mad ____".
Shout out
Knowledges
Acks
Props
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Props was a short way of saying proper acknowledgement. It was the 1990s version of a shout out. It was a way to tell people that you couldn't have done something without the help of the person you're giving props to.

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When something was awesome in the '90s, it was really ______.
Sweet
Sour
Bitter
Butter
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

While the characters on South Park still tell us that things are sweet, this term was used the most in the late 1990s (most likely originating from South Park itself). However, it wasn't just used to describe things, it was a way to say thank you as well.

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"Your _____" was the best comeback of the 1990s.
Sister
Grandma
Mom
Dad
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

If you couldn't figure out something to come back with in the 1990s, you'd probably just yell "your mom" really loud. It was the "I'm rubber, you're glue" of the decade, and it stuck around for quite a while.

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If someone you weren't interested in tried to get a date with you, you might respond with: as ___.
The crow flies
If
With
Below, so above
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

As if was another phrase made famous by Cher in "Clueless." Not only was she a fashion guru for those in need, she was the quintessential '90s teen, who used every slang term available at the time.

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When you were about to dump your boyfriend, you were going to "kick him to the ____"
Club
Right
Left
Curb
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

Kicking someone to the curb was the 1990s way of saying that you were kicking the person out of your life. They didn't deserve your time, or even your sidewalk at that point.

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"He's such a ______" was a great way to describe a man with no job, money, or class.
Scrub
Chub
Rug
Snug
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

A scrub is also known as a busta, according the the trio who made this term famous. If you were wall about girl power in the '90s, you didn't mind tell men that you weren't interested in any kind of scrub.

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When you wanted to ask someone how they were doing, you'd ask, "______?"
How goes it?
'Sup?
Will you marry me?
Have you eaten?
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

'Sup? wasn't just a way to ask people how they were doing. The decade brought on a lot of selfishness, so even though "'sup" literally means "What's up?" it was more of a greeting. People weren't really interested in what was actually up with you.

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If you were totally ______, it meant that you were feeling off and freaking out.
Snuggin'
Buggin'
Grubbin'
Rubbin'
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

This term could also be used to tell a friend that they were acting a little too crazy or off. "What's the matter with you? You're totally buggin' right now," was a great way to tell your friends to calm tf down.

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Your rich friends were making "______ money."
Bad
Mad
Sad
Fad
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

"Mad" was a term used in the '90s to express a lot of something, but it was more than a lot. It was crazy, unheard of, mad style a lot. If someone was making mad money, you've probably never seen so many commas in a paycheck.

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The song goes, "I'm pretty _____, for a white guy."
Shy
Fly
High
Wry
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

If you know the song by the Offspring, you know that "fly" meant cool back in the 1990s. The show "In Living Color" actually even had dancers that were known as "Fly Girls" to show how cool they were.

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When someone told a story with dialog, it would go like this: "...and then she was ____ like, 'no way!'"
Go
Very
All
Unsure
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

"All" was another filler word that function the same as "like" or could actually be used with it or on its own. You could say someone was "all 'you don't get it'" or you could say someone was "all like 'you don't get it.'"

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She was bout it- ______.
Bout it
Shout it
Scout it
Route it
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

If someone was "bout it-bout it" they were pretty much down for anything. This term originated in rap and hip-hop culture in the 1990s, but it did trickle into other cultures as well.

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If you're joking, you're just ________ around.
Clownin'
Showin'
Trippin'
Kickin'
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

When someone was clownin' around in the 1990s, they were just kidding. This phrase was usually used only when someone told a joke that offended people. In order to lighten the mood, the comedian would tell people he was just clownin' around.

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I'm going to have my friends come over to my ______.
Shroom
Room
House
Crib
Correct Answer
Wrong Answer

In the 1990s, your crib was your home, because ... well there's no real reason. It was just a cooler way to say that you lived somewhere. Maybe because it was comfortable to you. You might remember the show MTV Cribs, where we could see inside the mansions of the rich and famous.

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