Glazing

Glazing

praise
gaming
stan-culture
cringe

When you're praising someone so hard it's embarrassing. Glazing is over-the-top complimenting that crosses from genuine into cringe territory.

WHAT IS GLAZING?

Glazing means showering someone with excessive, almost embarrassing praise — like coating them in a thick layer of compliments the way you'd glaze a donut. If you're telling your friend their mid selfie is "literally the most stunning photo ever taken," you're glazing. The term originated in gaming and stan communities but has spread everywhere — from sports debates to group chats to corporate meetings where someone won't stop hyping up their boss.

HOW TO USE IT

Calling someone out: When a fan or friend is praising someone way too hard, you hit them with "bro, stop glazing." It's the polite way of saying they've lost all objectivity.
Self-aware humor: You can own it ironically — "yeah I'm glazing but this album genuinely changed my life" — acknowledging that you know you sound biased but don't care.
As a spectrum: There's light glazing (reasonable hype) and heavy glazing (full-on dickriding). Knowing where you fall on the glaze scale is a social skill.

EXAMPLES

"The way LeBron fans glaze him after every game is actually unhinged."
"I'm not glazing, but this might be the best song released this year fr."
"My coworker was glazing the CEO so hard in that meeting I had secondhand cringe."
"Everyone in the replies is glazing — the fit is mid at best, be honest."