India, Oct. 31 -- I f you've heard a kid say "six-seven" lately and had no idea what it meant, you're not alone. Dictionary.com has officially named "67" its 2025 Word of the Year, and yes, it's literally the number, not sixty-seven. The term exploded in Gen Alpha slang this year, popping up in memes, reels, and classrooms. It traces back to Skrilla's track Doot Doot (6 7) before going viral thanks to basketball clips and a meme-worthy "67 Kid". Teachers even flooded social media asking how to stop students from saying it nonstop. But what does it mean? No one really knows, and that's the point. Dictionary.com defines it as "so-so" or "maybe this, maybe that," but adds that its real power lies in its nonsense. "The most defining feature of '67' is that it's impossible to define," the platform said, calling it "meaningless, ubiquitous and absurd", a perfect symbol of a generation fluent in irony and digital humour. As the site summed it up, "'67' shows the speed at which a new word can rocket around the world as a rising generation enters the global conversation." HTC...