GEN-X - définition. Qu'est-ce que GEN-X
Diclib.com
Dictionnaire ChatGPT
Entrez un mot ou une phrase dans n'importe quelle langue 👆
Langue:

Traduction et analyse de mots par intelligence artificielle ChatGPT

Sur cette page, vous pouvez obtenir une analyse détaillée d'un mot ou d'une phrase, réalisée à l'aide de la meilleure technologie d'intelligence artificielle à ce jour:

  • comment le mot est utilisé
  • fréquence d'utilisation
  • il est utilisé plus souvent dans le discours oral ou écrit
  • options de traduction de mots
  • exemples d'utilisation (plusieurs phrases avec traduction)
  • étymologie

Qu'est-ce (qui) est GEN-X - définition

COHORT SUCCEEDING THE BABY BOOMERS, BORN FROM 1965 TO 1980.
Gen X; Baby Busters; Gen-X; Generation x; 13er; Gen x; Genr X; X generation; Generation X-er; Generation X-ers; Afterboomer; Gen Xers; Generation-X; Gen-Xers; Generation X in the United States; Xer; Political views of Generation X
  • An 8-bit 1977 [[Apple II]]
  • The [[fall of the Berlin Wall]] in 1989 was a landmark event in Generation X's formative years.
  • This cartoon depicts a 1980s-era dancer doing [[breakdancing]], an African-American dance form that was a key part of [[hip hop culture]].
  • [[Douglas Coupland]] popularized the term ''Generation X'' in his 1991 novel ''[[Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture]]''.
  • This illustration shows three cultural touchstones for Generation X: singer [[Michael Jackson]], who dominated pop charts in the 1980s; alien characters from the popular [[arcade video game]] ''[[Space Invaders]]''; and a [[videocassette]], which revolutionized home entertainment by enabling TV viewers to record shows and watch prerecorded films at home.
  • Clerks]]''.
  • Nirvana]] singer [[Kurt Cobain]] (pictured here in 1992) was called the "voice of Generation X" in the 1990s, playing the same role for this demographic as [[Bob Dylan]] and [[John Lennon]] played for [[baby boomers]] in the 1960s.<ref name="Felix-Jager, Steven 2017. p. 134">Felix-Jager, Steven (2017). ''With God on Our Side: Towards a Transformational Theology of Rock and Roll''. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 134.</ref>
  • America Online (AOL) version 2.0 program disk for Microsoft Windows (1994), widely used by younger Gen Xers to access the Internet
  • [[The Offspring]] performing in 2008 in Fortaleza, Brazil
  • [[Google]] co-founder [[Sergey Brin]], speaking at a [[Web 2.0]] conference
  • Total Fall Enrollment in U.S. degree granting Institutions 1965–1998
  • U.S. fertility rates, 1963–1981
  • U.S. Live Births Registered and Legal Abortions Reported 1970–1980
  • U.S. Marriages Ending in Divorce 1950–1990
  • U.S. Participation Rates for Women Professionals 1966—2013
  • U.S. living adult generations
  • U.S. Department of Health booklet published in 1988

GEN-X         
An expert system developed by General Electric.
Generation X         
¦ noun the generation born between the mid 1960s and the mid 1970s, perceived as being disaffected and directionless.
Derivatives
Generation Xer noun
Generation X         
Generation X (or Gen X for short) is the demographic cohort following the baby boomers and preceding the millennials. Researchers and popular media use the mid-to-late 1960s as starting birth years and the late 1970s to early 1980s as ending birth years, with the generation being generally defined as people born from 1965 to 1980.

Wikipédia

Generation X

Generation X (often shortened to Gen X) is the demographic cohort following the baby boomers and preceding the millennials. Researchers and popular media use the mid-to-late 1960s as starting birth years and the late 1970s to early 1980s as ending birth years, with the generation being generally defined as people born from 1965 to 1980. By this definition and U.S. Census data, there are 65.2 million Gen Xers in the United States as of 2019. Most members of Generation X are the children of the Silent Generation and early boomers; Xers are also often the parents of millennials and Generation Z.

As children in the 1970s and 1980s, a time of shifting societal values, Gen Xers were sometimes called the "latchkey generation," which stems from their returning as children to an empty home and needing to use the door key, due to reduced adult supervision compared to previous generations. This was a result of increasing divorce rates and increased maternal participation in the workforce prior to widespread availability of childcare options outside the home.

As adolescents and young adults in the 1980s and 1990s, Xers were dubbed the "MTV Generation" (a reference to the music video channel), sometimes being characterized as slackers, cynical, and disaffected. Some of the many cultural influences on Gen X youth included a proliferation of musical genres with strong social-tribal identity such as punk, post-punk, and heavy metal, in addition to later forms developed by Gen Xers themselves (e.g., grunge, grindcore and related genres). Film, both the birth of franchise mega-sequels and a proliferation of independent film (enabled in part by video) was also a notable cultural influence. Video games both in amusement parlours and in devices in western homes were also a major part of juvenile entertainment for the first time. Politically, in many Eastern Bloc countries, Generation X experienced the last days of communism and transition to capitalism as part of its youth. In much of the western world, a similar time period was defined by a dominance of conservatism and free market economics.

In midlife during the early 21st century, research describes them as active, happy, and achieving a work–life balance. The cohort has also been credited as entrepreneurial and productive in the workplace more broadly.

Exemples du corpus de texte pour GEN-X
1. Director Richard Linklater is known for his gentle, Gen–X movies.
2. New Delhi, June 21: Where does the Gen–X get daily dosage of news from?
3. "I have great hope," she said, that Social Security will be repaired for "my children‘s generation and certainly my grandchildren‘s." Cooper, a Gen X–er, asked Casey–Kirschling about that famous UFO poll.
4. Beyond the drugs, sex and rock‘n‘roll their boomer and Gen X parents navigated, technology and consumerism have accelerated the pace of life, giving kids easy access to influences that may or may not be parent–approved.
5. As a man in his 30s who still lives like a couch–potato jock out of college, Dupree is destined to be likened to such recent child–man slobs as Matthew McConaughey in "Failure to Launch" and Vince Vaughn in "The Break–Up." But whatever observations the movie has to make about the Gen–X tendency toward arrested development, what we‘re really watching is a less witty version of "What About Bob?", with Dupree as the innocent invader who‘s been placed on earth to drive Carl, the humorlessly toiling, overly rational middle–class breadwinner, crazy.