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Zillennial

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Blend of (Generation) Z +‎ millennial.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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Zillennial (plural Zillennials)

  1. A person born on the cusp of, or during the latter years of Generation Y/Millennials and early years of Generation Z.[1][2][3] They are cultural hybrids of both generations.
    Coordinate term: xennial
    • 2019, Robby Soave, Panic Attack: Young Radicals in the Age of Trump:
      These and other differences raise larger questions: How did Zillennials come to be this way? At what point did their tactics diverge?
    • 2019, Leila McKenzie Delis, Diversity, Inclusion & Belonging, page 23:
      Such widespread inequality calls for an urgent requirement for leaders to change, especially because the new workforce – Millennials and Zillennials – are demanding such change, in their droves.
    • 2023 June 6, Nadira Goffe, “A Zillennial Comedian Is Creating Taylor Swift–Style Chaos on Ticketmaster. Who Is Matt Rife?”, in Slate, retrieved 2023-06-06:

See also

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Timeline of generations
Generation BetaGeneration AlphazoomerGeneration ZZillennialmillennialGeneration YMTV generationGeneration Xbaby boomerSilent GenerationG.I. Generationgreatest generation

Adjective

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Zillennial (not comparable)

  1. Of or relating to Zillennials.
    • 2022 November 8, Allison Theresa, “Sadie Robertson Huff Preaches Submissive Womanhood. Her Message Is Uncomfortably Compelling.”, in Cosmopolitan[3]:
      The Duck Dynasty star turned faith influencer has given zillennial Christianity a seductive rebrand. Should you listen?

References

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  1. ^ Hannah L. Ubl, Lisa X. Walden, Debra Arbit (2017) “Chapter 13: Making Adjustments for Ages and Life Stages”, in Managing Millennials For Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 266
  2. ^
    2023 June 26, “Experience the American Generations: Which Generation Are You?”, in Encyclopaedia Britannica[1]:
    Zillennials, bridging the gap between millennials and Generation Z.
  3. ^ Mary E. Donahue (2020) “Chapter One Step 1: Stop Assuming”, in Message Received: 7 Steps to Break Down Communication Barriers at Work[2], McGraw-Hill Education, →ISBN, page 35