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What Does “Touch Grass” Mean?

Confusing slang in
Touch Grass
phrase
translates to
Plain English out

"Log off and go outside" — you've been online too long.

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The full meaning

Telling someone to "touch grass" means they've been online too long and need to reconnect with the real world — literally, go outside and touch some grass. It's aimed at people whose opinions, anger, or obsessions could only exist on the internet.

Where “touch grass” comes from

The phrase emerged from gaming and Twitter culture around 2020–2021 as the successor to "go outside" and "log off." The specific image of touching grass — the most basic possible contact with nature — is what made it stick.

How it’s actually used

Both an insult ("you wrote a 12-paragraph reply about a cartoon — touch grass") and self-aware advice ("I've been doomscrolling for four hours, I need to touch grass"). Universally understood across generations at this point.

You've been arguing with strangers online all day. Touch grass, please.
After that gaming marathon I genuinely needed to touch grass.
The group chat got so heated that someone just replied 'everyone touch grass' and left.
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✔ For parents & teachers

Harmless — and honestly one of the healthiest phrases in internet slang, since it's the internet telling itself to log off. Feel free to use it on your kids; they'll be annoyed, but they'll understand perfectly.

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Last updated: 2026-07-04. Slang evolves fast — we review definitions regularly.