Queer slang has always been more than language. Itās a pulse check. A mood ring. A collective inside joke that somehow manages to be hilarious, horny, and heartfelt all at once. From ballroom to TikTok to the group chat, the words we use arenāt just how we talk; theyāre how we find each other.
In 2025, that lexicon got even richer. Queer people continued remixing old standbys, coining new micro-labels, and turning cultural critique into meme formats. The result is a digital vocabulary thatās equal parts academic and absurd. A love letter to identity, community, and knowing exactly when to say āshe ate.ā
Here are ten queer terms that ruled the internet this year, from āmotherā to āserving,ā and everything in between.
Mother/Mothering
What started in ballroom culture as a term of reverence for house leaders has gone fully mainstream. To call someone āMotherā in 2025 is to name them the blueprint, the moment, the emotional support icon of your life. Whether itās BeyoncĆ© at the Cowboy Carter Tour or your local drag queen keeping a brunch crowd fed and hydrated, āSheās Motherā remains the highest queer compliment. āMothering,ā meanwhile, has evolved into a verb representing the art of nurturing while slaying.
Golden Retriever & Black Cat Lesbians
Sapphic TikTokās favorite dyad refuses to fade. The āgolden retrieverā lesbianāwarm, loyal, sunshine energyāpairs perfectly (and sometimes disastrously) with the āblack catā lesbianāaloof, cunning, and a little unbothered. The idea is meant to represent the psychological pairing of opposites attracting to balance each other out in relationships. By 2025, the archetype escaped WLW spaces and trickled into gay men, nonbinary folks, and straight allies, all of whom use it to describe relationship dynamics.
Baby Gay
Every queer person remembers being a baby gay. It was the tender, chaotic stage when everything felt like both a revelation and a disaster. The term has evolved from teasing shorthand into a genuine badge of affection, describing anyone new to queer life, love, or culture. Whether itās someone nervously attending their first Pride, misusing ātopā and ābottomā in the group chat, or discovering But Iām a Cheerleader for the first time, the baby gays keep the community soft. In 2025, calling someone a baby gay isnāt condescending, but rather an offer of mentorship with a wink. Weāve all been there, and weāre better for it.
The Tea
Every queer generation has its own word for gossip, but the tea reigns supreme. Born from Black drag culture and ballroom slang (as in āTā for truth), itās evolved into a catch-all for information, insight, or chaos, sometimes all at once. In 2025, spilling the tea isnāt just about drama. Itās about clarity. Whether itās celebrity mess, political hypocrisy, or your friendās messy situationship, āthe teaā reminds us that knowing whatās really going on is its own kind of power.
100 Footer
A ā100 footerā is someone whose queerness radiates from, well, 100 feet away. The termāequal parts joke and complimentāhas roared back in 2025 as a celebration of unmistakable gay energy. Whether itās the crop top, the confident walk, or simply the vibe, a 100 footer doesnāt need to say a word for the community to clock them instantly. Once used as a tease, itās now a badge of visibility in a world that still tries to closet people.
It's Giving...
@mrgrandeofficial 10 months deep into 2025⦠š¶ two more months until this song is complete! Follow to see how it shapes up! #rap #recap #2025
Another ballroom-scene turn of phrase, āItās givingā¦ā has become queer cultureās ultimate one-size-fits-all review. Itās how we describe everything from a killer outfit (āItās giving power topā) to political chaos (āItās giving dystopiaā). The phrase lets queers assess a vibe without ever naming it outright, whether itās campy, shady, affectionate, or all three. By 2025, āItās givingā¦ā isnāt just slang; itās an entire tonal language. Two words, infinite implications, and always a little fabulous.
Era
Everything is an era now. What began with Taylor Swiftās āEras Tourā has been fully absorbed into queer lexicon, because who understands self-reinvention better than us? Weāre not just changing; weāre entering our āhealing era,ā our ābottom era,ā our āI-finally-blocked-my-ex era.ā Itās part humor, part empowerment, and entirely self-aware. To be in an era is to own your evolution publicly, dramatize it for the feed, and maybe even exaggerate it for the girls in the group chat. Itās queer dramaturgy at its finest: your identity, your timeline, your main-character arc.
Fam/Family
āHey famā might sound casual online, but in 2025, family carries deeper resonance. As anti-LGBTQ+ policies intensify, queer people have re-embraced āfamā as shorthand for solidarity, chosen kinship, and the people who show up when institutions donāt. Itās warm, protective, and proudly inclusive, whether shouted across Pride parades or typed under a drag queenās livestream. āFamā has become both a greeting and a rallying cry, because when community is under attack, found family isnāt just a metaphor. Itās survival.
Serve/Ate/Cunty
The holy trinity of performance verbs. Born from Black and Latinx ballroom culture, these words dominate comment sections and captions alike. To serve is to deliver excellence; to eat is to obliterate the competition; to be cunty is to do it all with audacious confidence. Theyāve gone global (thank you, RuPaulās Drag Race!), but their roots remain queer. Every āshe ateā typed this year is a love letter to the queens who taught us how to own the moment.
The Girls/The Dolls
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In queer language, the girls have never just meant girls. From drag queens to trans women to anyone who embodies the divine feminine in all her chaotic glory, āthe dollsā are a term of endearment, solidarity, and power. By 2025, phrases like āprotect the dollsā evolved from ballroom slang into a full-on cultural mantra that became part meme, part movement. Online, itās shorthand for community love; offline, itās a reminder that trans women and drag performers remain the beating heart of queer culture. When the dolls are dolling, the world spins a little brighter.
Queer slang in 2025 isnāt just what we say; itās how we live. It moves through jokes and trends and moments that shouldnāt have mattered but somehow did. Itās the pulse in our laughter, the armor in our irony, and the proof that language will always belong to the ones who twist it best.






