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9 Words Forgotten Since Childhood That Will Instantly Make Everyone 60-80 Smile

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Before the era of stereos and CD players, the “Radiola” was the center of the home. This word often referred to the radio set combined with a record player, which enlivened family evenings.

For seniors, hearing “Radiola” evokes Sunday afternoons spent listening to radio shows, variety shows or records sent by grandparents.

It was a word that embodied both the technology of the time and the warmth of home, a symbol of family gathering around music and news.

9. Piggy bank

Today, children have online accounts or digital wallets, but for those who grew up in the 1950s and 1960s, the “piggy bank” was a sacred object.

Whether made of porcelain, metal, or plastic, the piggy bank was used to save small coins and dream about what one might buy one day.

Hearing this word brings to mind patience, discipline, and the simple pleasure of watching one’s small fortune grow over time. It’s a word that instantly transports one back to the innocence and imagination of childhood.

Final Thoughts

These words have not completely disappeared. They are sometimes found in the language of the elderly or in works seeking to recreate the era. But they have almost completely disappeared from everyday language.

What makes them so special is not just nostalgia. They represent a way of speaking—and therefore of thinking—very different from today’s: more colorful, more inventive, more playful in the way they express an idea or a feeling.

 

When 60- to 80-year-olds hear these words, they don’t just remember the vocabulary. They remember a time when language was generous, creative, and less concerned with appearing “fashionable.” And that’s enough to make you smile.

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