- What Does 'Chopped' Mean? The Slang Term That's Grown Popular On TikTok Because Of 'Chopped Chin' Explained
- What Is The 'When The Accent Slips Out' Meme? The Viral 'Accent Slip' TikTok Trend Explained
- What Does 'Getting Swiss Cheesed' Mean? The Meaning Of The Slang Phrase 'Swiss Cheese' Explained
- Why Are TikTokers Calling SpongeBob 'Pagani?' The Viral 'I Call Patrick Subaru' Spinoff Meme Explained
- What Is 'Blobslop'? The Term Used To Criticize Supposedly 'Low Effort' Twitter Blob Art Explained
Celebrity Animorphs
July 20th, 2012 5:37 PMThis photoshop meme morphs images of celebrities into various animals and inanimate objects using a template inspired by the cover art from the science fiction book series Animorphs.
First World Fashion Problems
July 20th, 2012 4:45 PMThis College Humor sketch points out the absurdity of popular trends in first world fashion.
CAPTCHA Hates You
July 20th, 2012 4:15 PMFor more randomly generated word challenges, head over to KYMdb – CAPTCHA Art!
Dihydrogen Monoxide Hoax
July 20th, 2012 3:40 PMInternet Mysteries: Since its inception by University of California Santa Cruz students in the 1990s, this online hoax surrounding the scientific name for pure water has become a staple April Fool's Day joke on the English-speaking web.
No Idea What I'm Doing: Bond Edition
July 20th, 2012 2:30 PMIt turns out Britain's badass secret agent has a secret of his own: he doesn't know how to type.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Celebrity Animorphs
This photoshop meme morphs images of celebrities into various animals and inanimate objects using a template inspired by the cover art from the science fiction book series Animorphs.
First World Fashion Problems
This College Humor sketch points out the absurdity of popular trends in first world fashion.
CAPTCHA Hates You
For more randomly generated word challenges, head over to KYMdb – CAPTCHA Art!
Dihydrogen Monoxide Hoax
Internet Mysteries: Since its inception by University of California Santa Cruz students in the 1990s, this online hoax surrounding the scientific name for pure water has become a staple April Fool's Day joke on the English-speaking web.
No Idea What I'm Doing: Bond Edition
It turns out Britain's badass secret agent has a secret of his own: he doesn't know how to type.