While “psych” is technically correct, the worst kind of correct, my preference would be to spell it “syke.” “Psych” and “sike” just don’t have enough meme energy to them and could be more easily misinterpreted as meaning something else.
Having lived through that era as the slang making demographic, I would say that “sike” or “syke” is specific to the context of having just said something to fool someone. “Dude you want my bike? You can have it.” “Really?” “Sike!” See also the obnoxious drawn out “NOOOOT” you’d get at the time.
You would still use “psych” in terms of psyching up a team, psyching out an opponent, etc.
Wait is that how you spell “sike”? I always assumed it was “psych”, like being psyched out.
Looks like this specific meaning of psych can be spelt sike - but not other definitions!
Tbh I’d never heard of this meaning in either spelling.
Nifty! Thanks.
“Psych” is the original spelling, but so many kids didn’t know that that “sike” became common.
Looks like ya technically correct. I hate that there’s little to no official literature on this, looking anything credible up is a pain.
https://www.reddit.com/r/grammar/comments/hm3xpq/sike_vs_psych/#:~:text=Everyone knows of the slang,the mind%2C or the psyche.
It’s definitely psych. Sike is for people who also write should of.
All of the sudden
In the meme-verse, I feel like “sike” is much more common (eg, “say sike right now”)
While “psych” is technically correct, the worst kind of correct, my preference would be to spell it “syke.” “Psych” and “sike” just don’t have enough meme energy to them and could be more easily misinterpreted as meaning something else.
Having lived through that era as the slang making demographic, I would say that “sike” or “syke” is specific to the context of having just said something to fool someone. “Dude you want my bike? You can have it.” “Really?” “Sike!” See also the obnoxious drawn out “NOOOOT” you’d get at the time.
You would still use “psych” in terms of psyching up a team, psyching out an opponent, etc.
You are 100% correct.
I’d just spell it “ough”.