My DD went through a period where she would call her Indian friends and me ‘beta’. As in, ‘Hello beta’. It came and went quickly. We’re Indian but do not speak Hindi at home. As for OP, I don’t think it’s racist for her kid to use that word. It’s a term of endearment. |
LOL |
OP: next time your daughter utters it, just say: no, I am a sigma. |
Ok thanks. The other thing she does is say it with an accent. |
Nobody cares expect liberal Karens. |
Which is more problematic. She can use the word, but say it as someone with her background would say it. |
She is trying to say a Hindi word with proper pronunciation? |
Nobody here listens to Andrew Tate or ever would, but the term beta male pre-dates him. It's a lack of masculinity and was a fine insult until he apparently ruined it for everyone? Back in the 80s we just called everyone "gay" so beta is an improvement at the sentiment (albeit terribly insulting) that is being conveyed. also, I don't think a 12 yo knows this. |
Found the liberal Karen! |
Using the word “beta,” pronounced “beh-ta” was common at my kid’s W last year. It refers to the term of endearment for a generation younger than you in Hindi. There are a lot of videos online of younger South Asian kids mimicking their parents or grandparents and making fun of their parents and the term “beta” comes up. |
| I meant W school |
It's both. And beta is being used as opposite of alpha by the young ones nowadays. |
I asked my 7th grader, she said it was used a lot last year and it wasn’t used as an Indian phrase. |
THIS!!! Holy crap, I can't believe what morons most of you are. It has nothing to do with Andrew Tate, it's not being used as the alternative to alpha. There's this thing called social media and an app called TikTok.... this may blow your mind, but there's a culture on there of teens sharing humorous parts of their lives and adopting each others' slang. This is where the INDIAN term beta comes in. I'm INDIAN myself and yeah I'm pretty aware that there's no INDIAN language. Beta transcends just one language from the Indian subcontinent....we can say terms are American, right? As opposed to British English or Australian English. It's fine. Do we understand that? There are times when we can characterize a word as deriving from a whole ass nation, and this is one of those times. Shame on you @$$holes criticizing the White OP for characterizing the term that way. Calling beta a strictly Hindi term is way MORE moronic, actually. OP, there is nothing wrong with calling it Indian. There are Indian people who may be offended (but probably wouldn't be, because they tend to have more sense than to get offended by things like this) if you ascribe beta to one language or dialect. This sort of pedantry is what keeps people from wanting to learn about other cultures. You'll often see in videos of Jamie Oliver cooking and using the word "pukka" (the way he means it is something like "top rate")- let's get right on canceling him, too. Beta is a term of endearment for a child. OP, your kid is doing nothing wrong. |
Yawn |