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Why did LOL infiltrate the language?

By James Morgan BBC News

The internet slang term "LOL" (laughing out loud) has been added to the Oxford

English Dictionary, to the mild dismay of language purists. But where did the

term originate? And is it really a threat to our lexicon?

"OMG! LOL's in the OED. LMAO!"

If you find the above string of letters utterly unintelligible, you are clearly

an internet "noob". Let me start again.

Golly gosh! The popular initialism LOL (laughing out loud) has been inducted

into the canon of the English language, the Oxford English Dictionary. Blimey!

What is going on?

The OED defines LOL as an interjection "used chiefly in electronic

communications... to draw attention to a joke or humorous statement, or to

express amusement".

It is both "LOL" where all the letters are pronounced separately, but also

commonly "lol" where it is pronounced as a word.

The phrase was ushered in alongside OMG (Oh My God), with dictionary guardians

pointing to their growing occurrence "in e-mails, texts, social networking...

and even in spoken use".

As well as school playgrounds, words like "lolz" and "lolling" can be heard in

pubs and offices - though often sarcastically, or in parody.

OED definition

LOL (ɛləʊˈɛl/lɒl) colloq.

A. int. Originally and chiefly in the language of electronic communications:

'ha ha!'; used to draw attention to a joke or humorous statement, or to express

amusement.

B. n. An instance of the written interjection 'LOL'.

Love it or loathe it, "lol" is now a legitimate word in our lexicon, says

Graeme Diamond, the OED's principal editor for new words.

"The word is common, widespread, and people understand it," he explains.

The word serves a real purpose - it conveys tone in text, something that even

the most cynical critics accept.

"I don't 'LOL'. I'm basically someone who kind of hates it," says Rob Manuel of

the internet humour site b3ta.

"But the truth is, we do need emotional signifiers in tweets and emails, just

as conversation has laughter. 'LOL' might make me look like a twit, but at

least you know when I'm being arch."

Death of the dictionary

But for young internet entrepreneurs like Ben Huh, of the Cheezburger Network

of comedy sites, "LOL" is much more than a necessary evil. It's both a tool and

a toy.

Ben Huh, CEO, Cheezburger Ben Huh says LOL is 'a part of everyday life'

"'LOL' is a part of everyday life. I use it all the time in e-mail exchanges.

It's a polite way of acknowledging someone," he says.

"And yes, I do say 'LOL' out loud. In almost an ironic sense, like a slow

handclap after a bad joke. 'Lol' means 'yes, I understand that was funny, but

I'm not really laughing'."

But no matter how much irony we cake it in, the L-word grinds the ears of many

people over the age of 25.

"The death of the dictionary" is how one blogger greeted its induction to the

bastion of English.

While on Facebook, there are at least half a dozen "anti-LOL" groups, where

lol-ophobes dream of loll-ageddon:

"If something is funny, 'ha', 'hehehehe', or 'hee hee' is perfectly fine

depending on the joke, and more descriptive than 'lol'," writes one hater.

Another complains that lol "doesn't sound anything like laughter. In fact you

physically CAN'T say it while smiling. I'm all for bastardisation of the

language, but with lol, that thing you thought was rubbish really is rubbish".

Wags point out that "LOL" is almost always disingenuous. "How many people are

actually laughing out loud when they say LOL?" asks David Crystal, author of

Language and the Internet.

LOL around the world

French version, from the initials of "mort de rire" which roughly translated

means "dying of laughter"

Hebrew version. The letter ח is pronounced 'kh' and ה is pronounced 'h'.

Putting them together makes "khakhakha"

Thai variation of LOL. "5" in Thai is pronounced "ha", three of them being

"hahaha"

Swedish abbreviation of the term Asgarv, meaning intense laughter

Afghan abbreviation of the Dari phrase "ma khanda mikonom", which means "I am

laughing"

Source: Know Your Meme

But those laughing least of all are the language purists, who lament "LOL" as a

hallmark of creeping illiteracy.

"There is a worrying trend of adults mimicking teen-speak," says Marie Clair of

the Plain English Campaign, in the Daily Mail.

"They [adults] are using slang words and ignoring grammar. Their language is

deteriorating."

But is "LOL" really a lazy, childish concoction?

When the OED traced the origins of the acronym, they discovered 1980s computer

fanatics were responsible.

The oldest written records of "LOL" (used to mean laughing out loud) are in the

archives of Usenet, an early internet discussion forum.

And the original use was typed by Wayne Pearson, in Calgary, who says he wrote

the first ever LOL in reply to a gag by someone called "Sprout".

"LOL" was "geek-speak that filtered through to the mainstream", says Manuel.

"I first saw it in the 1990s - at the end of emails. Then it got picked up by

the young kids. Then it went naff. But it came back ironically - with people

saying things like 'megalolz'."

A lolcat Lolcats brought the phrase to a whole new audience

Grandparents, for example, often adopt "LOL" as one of their first "internet

words", says Huh. "'LOL' and 'OMG' are like momma and dada."

But many mistake "LOL" for "lots of love", leading to some unintended "LOLs",

such as the infamous tale of the mother who wrote: "Your grandmother has just

passed away. LOL."

It has also lent its name to some wildly popular internet crazes, like Lolcats,

whose appeal spread far beyond the realms of cyber-geeks.

More than funny

So why has "LOL", above all other web phrases, become such a phenomenon?

Because it's simple and multipurpose, says Tim Hwang, founder of ROFLCon, a

whole festival dedicated to "internet awesome".

"The magic of LOL is that it's both exclusive and inclusive," he says. "On one

level, it's simple to understand.

"But it also conveys something subtle - depending on the situation. It means

more than just 'funny'. For example, if I had my bike stolen, my friend might

reply 'LOL'. It helps overcome an awkward moment."

For school kids, acronyms like "LOL" and "KMT" (kiss my teeth) are a kind of

secret code, a badge of belonging, says Tony Thorne, author of the Dictionary

of Contemporary Slang.

LOL-ternatives

Simple and clear but may appear childish. Are you a Comic Sans fan?

Even more annoying than LOL.

One is fine, three reeks of desperation: 'Look!!! I made a joke!!!' Yes, we

noticed.

The safe option. Effective but not very imaginative. Were you really laughing?

You are living in the dark ages.

"I go into schools and record slang words - all the new terms kids are saying -

words like 'lolcano'. And if you talk to kids they will say this is our

language - this is what identifies us."

But aren't these slang words also harmful to children's vocabulary? Not at all,

says Thorne.

"Government educationalists get all worked up about words like LOL - they see

them as substandard and unorthodox.

"But the small amount of research on this issue shows that kids who use slang

abbreviations are the more articulate ones. It's called code switching."

If we have a literacy crisis, it's among adults as well as children, says

Thorne. And slang is not the culprit. In fact, it is enriching the language.

Diamond agrees: "There will always be a minority who want the English language

to remain as a frozen beast, that doesn't admit changes," he says.

"But language is a vibrant, evolving animal."