Periodt

2009Catchphrase / slang expressionsemi-active

Also known as: Period't · Period · And That's on Periodt

Periodt is a 2009 Black internet slang term—a deliberately misspelled "period"—used to end statements with emphatic finality and confident agreement.

Periodt is a purposely misspelled version of "period" used to end a statement with extra emphasis and finality. The term originated in Black internet culture and drag/ball community slang, with the earliest known online usage appearing on Twitter in May 20094. It broke into mainstream internet culture around 2018-2019 through Black Twitter, TikTok, and Instagram, becoming one of Gen Z's signature expressions of confident agreement2.

TL;DR

Periodt a slang term meaning 'end of discussion' or used for emphasis at the end of a statement, popularized by Gen Z culture.

Overview

Periodt functions as a verbal exclamation point. You drop it at the end of a sentence to signal that the conversation is over, your point is made, and no rebuttal is welcome1. The added "t" at the end of "period" gives the word a sharper, more emphatic sound, almost like snapping your fingers to punctuate a statement1. It mirrors certain speech patterns in African American Vernacular English (AAVE) where a hard "t" sound gets appended to words ending in "d" for emphasis4.

The word sits at the intersection of drag culture, Black Twitter, and Gen Z internet speak. It's not just agreement. It's a mic drop. "Beyoncé is the greatest performer alive, periodt." No room for debate, no follow-up needed2.

The cultural roots of periodt trace back to offline AAVE and drag/ball community slang, where adding a "t" (usually uppercase) to words ending in "d" was common practice. Terms like "draggedT" and "slayedT" followed the same pattern4. The linguistic convention predates its internet life by years.

The earliest known online appearance came on May 5, 2009, when Twitter user @PBCliberal posted "Churches should pay property tax periodt"4. Whether this was intentional slang or a typo is unclear, but it marks the first documented digital use. Later that year on September 17, 2009, Twitter user @timmeehan666 referenced the term as an example of speech patterns they disliked, suggesting the word was already circulating in spoken language4.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (earliest known post), Black Twitter / drag culture (cultural roots)
Creator
Unknown; @PBCliberal
Date
2009 (earliest online usage)
Year
2009

The cultural roots of periodt trace back to offline AAVE and drag/ball community slang, where adding a "t" (usually uppercase) to words ending in "d" was common practice. Terms like "draggedT" and "slayedT" followed the same pattern. The linguistic convention predates its internet life by years.

The earliest known online appearance came on May 5, 2009, when Twitter user @PBCliberal posted "Churches should pay property tax periodt". Whether this was intentional slang or a typo is unclear, but it marks the first documented digital use. Later that year on September 17, 2009, Twitter user @timmeehan666 referenced the term as an example of speech patterns they disliked, suggesting the word was already circulating in spoken language.

How It Spread

Between 2009 and 2017, periodt lived mostly as casual punctuation on Twitter, used by people in Black online communities to drive home a point. It hadn't gone mainstream yet.

The phrase "and that's on periodt" first showed up on December 11, 2017, when Twitter user @__nicollleeeee used it in a tweet. This phrasing would later become the most viral form of the expression.

Things picked up speed in 2018. Singer Premadonna used "periodt" as an Instagram caption on February 9, 2018, pulling in over 12,000 likes. On May 15, 2018, the word got its first Urban Dictionary entry, and a more thorough definition followed on October 20, 2018 from user Peachalpha, who described it as the Gen Z equivalent of "and that's final". That entry pulled in over 250 upvotes. Around the same time in July 2018, a Reddit user on r/OutOfTheLoop asked why people were writing "moodt" and "periodt" instead of spelling things normally. A commenter explained the drag and AAVE origins of appending "t" to words.

On September 28, 2018, a tweet featuring a video of Michelle Obama saying "Periodt" racked up over 1,800 likes and 540 retweets. The First Lady's association with the term gave it a boost outside its original communities.

2019 was the breakout year. On February 12, 2019, Twitter user @oneliddoflack posted a video captioned with the word that exploded to over 1.9 million views, 130,000 likes, and 51,000 retweets. On April 28, Instagram comedian Rickey Thompson posted a video captioned "AND THAT'S ON PERIODT!!!!" that hit 3.9 million views and 790,000 likes. The next day, a Captain America meme with "periodt" overlaid on the image pulled 7,700 likes on Twitter.

On TikTok, the hashtag #periodt accumulated over 632 million views as teenagers adopted it into their everyday vocabulary. The term crossed over from its Black and LGBTQ+ origins into general Gen Z usage across all demographics.

Platforms

TwitterTikTokInstagramReddit

Timeline

2019

Periodt becomes mainstream Gen Z slang

2019-2021

Popular across social media platforms

2020-01-01

Periodt started spreading across social media platforms

2021-01-01

Periodt reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

2022+

Begins to decline as newer slang emerges

2024-01-01

Periodt entered the broader pop culture conversation

Pre-2019

Term exists in AAVE communities

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Periodt goes at the very end of a declarative statement. It works best on bold opinions, hype moments, or anything you want to shut down debate on:

- "She ate that performance, periodt." - "Best album of the year, periodt." - "We're not doing this again, periodt."

Common conventions: - Pair it with "and that's on" for extra emphasis: "And that's on periodt" - Combine with other slang like "fr" (for real) or "facts" for layered emphasis - Keep it casual. This is strictly informal language for texts, tweets, and comments. Using periodt in a work email or academic paper will get you some looks.

The word typically shows up in all caps ("PERIODT") when the speaker wants maximum impact.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

A UCLA sociolinguistics study examined who uses "periodt" and in what contexts. Researchers surveyed over 100 college-aged students and found that gender identity and sexual orientation affected whether someone was familiar with the term, but not how or when they used it. All LGBTQ+ respondents in the study knew the word, compared to a smaller percentage of heterosexual respondents. A larger proportion of female respondents were familiar with the term than male respondents. The study also found that most people felt comfortable using periodt online with peers, less comfortable using it face-to-face, and almost universally uncomfortable using it in professional settings.

The term's migration from drag/ball culture through Black Twitter to mainstream Gen Z slang follows a well-documented pattern in internet linguistics, where AAVE and queer community language gets adopted by wider audiences. Multiple slang dictionaries and language learning platforms now include periodt in their databases, treating it as a standard piece of digital vocabulary.

Fun Facts

The word's pronunciation varies. Some say "PURR-ihd-t" with a sharp stop, others stretch it out as "PEE-ree-uhd-t".

Adding "t" to words ending in "d" is a broader drag/ball culture convention, not unique to periodt. "DraggedT," "slayedT," and "moodt" follow the same rule.

The UCLA study found that respondents were "extremely uncomfortable" with the idea of using periodt in a professional setting, making it one of the more context-sensitive slang terms in Gen Z vocabulary.

Despite being one of TikTok's most-used slang terms, periodt existed for nearly a decade on Twitter before TikTok even launched.

Derivatives & Variations

Variations with other punctuation marks

A variation of Periodt

(2019)

Extended versions for emphasis

A variation of Periodt

(2019)

Related finality expressions

A variation of Periodt

(2019)

Frequently Asked Questions

Periodt

2009Catchphrase / slang expressionsemi-active

Also known as: Period't · Period · And That's on Periodt

Periodt is a 2009 Black internet slang term—a deliberately misspelled "period"—used to end statements with emphatic finality and confident agreement.

Periodt is a purposely misspelled version of "period" used to end a statement with extra emphasis and finality. The term originated in Black internet culture and drag/ball community slang, with the earliest known online usage appearing on Twitter in May 2009. It broke into mainstream internet culture around 2018-2019 through Black Twitter, TikTok, and Instagram, becoming one of Gen Z's signature expressions of confident agreement.

TL;DR

Periodt a slang term meaning 'end of discussion' or used for emphasis at the end of a statement, popularized by Gen Z culture.

Overview

Periodt functions as a verbal exclamation point. You drop it at the end of a sentence to signal that the conversation is over, your point is made, and no rebuttal is welcome. The added "t" at the end of "period" gives the word a sharper, more emphatic sound, almost like snapping your fingers to punctuate a statement. It mirrors certain speech patterns in African American Vernacular English (AAVE) where a hard "t" sound gets appended to words ending in "d" for emphasis.

The word sits at the intersection of drag culture, Black Twitter, and Gen Z internet speak. It's not just agreement. It's a mic drop. "Beyoncé is the greatest performer alive, periodt." No room for debate, no follow-up needed.

The cultural roots of periodt trace back to offline AAVE and drag/ball community slang, where adding a "t" (usually uppercase) to words ending in "d" was common practice. Terms like "draggedT" and "slayedT" followed the same pattern. The linguistic convention predates its internet life by years.

The earliest known online appearance came on May 5, 2009, when Twitter user @PBCliberal posted "Churches should pay property tax periodt". Whether this was intentional slang or a typo is unclear, but it marks the first documented digital use. Later that year on September 17, 2009, Twitter user @timmeehan666 referenced the term as an example of speech patterns they disliked, suggesting the word was already circulating in spoken language.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (earliest known post), Black Twitter / drag culture (cultural roots)
Creator
Unknown; @PBCliberal
Date
2009 (earliest online usage)
Year
2009

The cultural roots of periodt trace back to offline AAVE and drag/ball community slang, where adding a "t" (usually uppercase) to words ending in "d" was common practice. Terms like "draggedT" and "slayedT" followed the same pattern. The linguistic convention predates its internet life by years.

The earliest known online appearance came on May 5, 2009, when Twitter user @PBCliberal posted "Churches should pay property tax periodt". Whether this was intentional slang or a typo is unclear, but it marks the first documented digital use. Later that year on September 17, 2009, Twitter user @timmeehan666 referenced the term as an example of speech patterns they disliked, suggesting the word was already circulating in spoken language.

How It Spread

Between 2009 and 2017, periodt lived mostly as casual punctuation on Twitter, used by people in Black online communities to drive home a point. It hadn't gone mainstream yet.

The phrase "and that's on periodt" first showed up on December 11, 2017, when Twitter user @__nicollleeeee used it in a tweet. This phrasing would later become the most viral form of the expression.

Things picked up speed in 2018. Singer Premadonna used "periodt" as an Instagram caption on February 9, 2018, pulling in over 12,000 likes. On May 15, 2018, the word got its first Urban Dictionary entry, and a more thorough definition followed on October 20, 2018 from user Peachalpha, who described it as the Gen Z equivalent of "and that's final". That entry pulled in over 250 upvotes. Around the same time in July 2018, a Reddit user on r/OutOfTheLoop asked why people were writing "moodt" and "periodt" instead of spelling things normally. A commenter explained the drag and AAVE origins of appending "t" to words.

On September 28, 2018, a tweet featuring a video of Michelle Obama saying "Periodt" racked up over 1,800 likes and 540 retweets. The First Lady's association with the term gave it a boost outside its original communities.

2019 was the breakout year. On February 12, 2019, Twitter user @oneliddoflack posted a video captioned with the word that exploded to over 1.9 million views, 130,000 likes, and 51,000 retweets. On April 28, Instagram comedian Rickey Thompson posted a video captioned "AND THAT'S ON PERIODT!!!!" that hit 3.9 million views and 790,000 likes. The next day, a Captain America meme with "periodt" overlaid on the image pulled 7,700 likes on Twitter.

On TikTok, the hashtag #periodt accumulated over 632 million views as teenagers adopted it into their everyday vocabulary. The term crossed over from its Black and LGBTQ+ origins into general Gen Z usage across all demographics.

Platforms

TwitterTikTokInstagramReddit

Timeline

2019

Periodt becomes mainstream Gen Z slang

2019-2021

Popular across social media platforms

2020-01-01

Periodt started spreading across social media platforms

2021-01-01

Periodt reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

2022+

Begins to decline as newer slang emerges

2024-01-01

Periodt entered the broader pop culture conversation

Pre-2019

Term exists in AAVE communities

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Periodt goes at the very end of a declarative statement. It works best on bold opinions, hype moments, or anything you want to shut down debate on:

- "She ate that performance, periodt." - "Best album of the year, periodt." - "We're not doing this again, periodt."

Common conventions: - Pair it with "and that's on" for extra emphasis: "And that's on periodt" - Combine with other slang like "fr" (for real) or "facts" for layered emphasis - Keep it casual. This is strictly informal language for texts, tweets, and comments. Using periodt in a work email or academic paper will get you some looks.

The word typically shows up in all caps ("PERIODT") when the speaker wants maximum impact.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

A UCLA sociolinguistics study examined who uses "periodt" and in what contexts. Researchers surveyed over 100 college-aged students and found that gender identity and sexual orientation affected whether someone was familiar with the term, but not how or when they used it. All LGBTQ+ respondents in the study knew the word, compared to a smaller percentage of heterosexual respondents. A larger proportion of female respondents were familiar with the term than male respondents. The study also found that most people felt comfortable using periodt online with peers, less comfortable using it face-to-face, and almost universally uncomfortable using it in professional settings.

The term's migration from drag/ball culture through Black Twitter to mainstream Gen Z slang follows a well-documented pattern in internet linguistics, where AAVE and queer community language gets adopted by wider audiences. Multiple slang dictionaries and language learning platforms now include periodt in their databases, treating it as a standard piece of digital vocabulary.

Fun Facts

The word's pronunciation varies. Some say "PURR-ihd-t" with a sharp stop, others stretch it out as "PEE-ree-uhd-t".

Adding "t" to words ending in "d" is a broader drag/ball culture convention, not unique to periodt. "DraggedT," "slayedT," and "moodt" follow the same rule.

The UCLA study found that respondents were "extremely uncomfortable" with the idea of using periodt in a professional setting, making it one of the more context-sensitive slang terms in Gen Z vocabulary.

Despite being one of TikTok's most-used slang terms, periodt existed for nearly a decade on Twitter before TikTok even launched.

Derivatives & Variations

Variations with other punctuation marks

A variation of Periodt

(2019)

Extended versions for emphasis

A variation of Periodt

(2019)

Related finality expressions

A variation of Periodt

(2019)

Frequently Asked Questions