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WeAreSocial.com.au managing director Julian Ward said the various different shortcuts, which range from the the compassionate ILY (I Love You) to the more profain WTF (What the F***) are commonplace now and indicate the changing way people harness social media.
LOL: Oznacza „Śmiać się na głos”, co po hiszpańsku oznacza „Śmiać się na głos”. o mój Boże : „O mój Boże”, co można przetłumaczyć jako „O mój Boże!”. WTF : Skrót od wulgarnego wyrażenia „Co do cholery”.
Have you ever thought about where now-ubiquitous semi-words like "OMG" and "LOL" come from? Sure, they've been sanctified by the Oxford English Dictionary as totally legitimate, but it's often difficult to figure out how, exactly, they began.
LOL - Z angielskiego: "Laughing out loud", czyli "Śmiać się w głos/śmiejąc się głośno" Btw - Z angielskiego: "By the way", czyli "Swoją drogą/nawiasem mówiąc/przy okazji" Rotfl lub Rofl - Z...
lol. It’s handy shorthand for laughter, or the harbinger of an intellectual apocalypse, depending on who you ask. Its part of speech is also debated: spelled out, it’s an initialism, but if you pronounce it as a word, it’s an acronym.
INTERNET slang has taken over but where do acronyms LOL, ROFL and WTF originate? Some have surprising beginnings. Does this make OMG officially okay to now use? HAVE you ever thought about where now-ubiquitous semi-words like “OMG” and “LOL” come from?
Internet slang (also called Internet shorthand, cyber-slang, netspeak, digispeak or chatspeak) is a non-standard or unofficial form of language used by people on the Internet to communicate to one another. [1] . An example of Internet slang is "lol" meaning "laugh out loud."