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Kids are saying 'get sendy': Here's what it means

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 29, 2025, 05:30 IST
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Wonder what kids mean when they say 'get sendy'?

“Get sendy” (or “let’s get sendy”) is a teen slang that roughly means “go all in/go for it/do the thing with abandon.” It is a playful off-shoot of the older phrase “send it” and recent viral clips (notably from creators associated with the Nelk/“Full Send” scene) amplified the phrase on TikTok and other youth platforms. The phrase is more than one line of dialogue. It is useful to study how youth slang forms, spreads and sometimes nudges risky play.

2/8

What “get sendy” means

Kids use “get sendy” to hype themselves and each other before doing something they intend to do with full force — from a harmless joke (pretending to “shotgun” a burger) to a dare or stunt. Urban-dictionary–style notes and reputable language sources characterise it as the youthful evolution of “send it” (sports/adrenaline vernacular) that now functions as a general call to commit. Use in schools is typically playful, though adults occasionally worry when the call precedes risky behaviour.

3/8

The (social) origin: Where the phrase caught fire

Several mainstream reports trace the modern meme form to online prank/party creators (the Nelk Boys/ “Full Send” crew) and a viral TikTok clip that turned the phrase into a catchphrase and gesture. From there it jumped into short-form videos, teacher TikToks and hallway talk — the exact path of modern slang diffusion. That rapid amplification is a distinctively networked, digital pattern of a short clip, remixing and mass adoption.

4/8

What parents, teachers and schools should know

Most uses of get sendy are playful: a call to “full send” something silly (a dramatic bite, a funny pose) rather than a fixed instruction to do harm. Language authorities and news outlets describe it as “go all in” and trace it to short-form viral clips.

5/8

Why it spreads

Networked meme dynamics and adolescent peer identity work made the phrase perfect viral fuel.

6/8

Where it can be risky

When the phrase cues group stunts or alcohol mimicry, peer-presence reward dynamics can push some teens toward dangerous choices. That’s why educators should treat the phrase as a conversation starter, not an automatic cause for alarm.

7/8

How to respond effectively

Ask curious and non-judgemental questions (“What does ‘get sendy’ mean to you?”), use it as a teaching moment about peer pressure and safe boundaries and monitor situations where the phrase becomes a chant before risky behaviour rather than a silly joke. Talking about memes can open doors to meaningful discussions about identity and stress.

8/8

Takeaway for parents and caregivers

Get sendy is a small linguistic symptom of bigger contemporary processes including youth creativity, meme culture, rapid networked diffusion and peer dynamics that can amplify both fun and risk. Treat the phrase as a window into kids’ online worlds by asking what it means to them, watching the context and using it to teach safe and peer-smart behaviour. The phrase itself is mostly harmless but the social situation decides whether it stays that way.

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