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'r u online?': the evolving lexicon of wired teens
The Christian Science Monitor ^ | December 12, 2002 | Kris Axtman

Posted on 12/12/2002 5:26:41 PM PST by gitmo

HOUSTON – THE conversation begins on the computer, nothing too atypical for a pair of teenage boys bored on a Friday night:
Garret: hey

Josh: sup

Garret: j/cu

Josh: same

Garret: wut r u doing 2nite

Josh: n2m

Garret: cool

Need a translation? Not if you're a 13-year-old who's been Internet-connected since birth. For the rest of us, welcome to the world of Net Lingo - the keyboard generation's gift to language and culture. "sup" is not a call to supper, but a query: "What's up?" And Josh's "n2m" reply? "Not too much."

As in every age, teenagers today are adapting the English language to meet their needs for self-expression. But this time, it's happening online - and at lightning speed. To some, it's a creative twist on dialogue, and a new, harmless version of teen slang. But to anxious grammarians and harried teachers, it's the linguistic ruin of Generation IM (instant messenger).

Whatever it is, the result fills Internet chat rooms, e-mail, and the increasingly popular instant messenger, on which correspondents fire off confessions, one-liners, and blather in real-time group chats or, more often, fleet-fingered tête-a-têtes.

"This is really an extension of what teenagers have always done: recreate the language in their own image. But this new lingo combines writing and speaking to a degree that we've never seen before," says Neil Randall, an English professor at the University of Waterloo and author of "Lingo Online: A Report on the Language of the Keyboard Generation."

The result, he says, is the use of writing to simulate speech - a skill not formally taught. In the process, typed communication has entered a new era of speed.

In a third-floor bedroom in Houston, Garret Thomas has three online conversations going at once. That's nothing, he says. Sometimes he chats with as many as 20 people at a time - chosen from his 200-plus "buddy list" that shows which of his friends are online and available. "I'm a really fast typer," says the redhead.

Though creating unique speech patterns is nothing new for the younger set, this generation is doing it in a novel way.

New acronyms, abbreviations, and emoticons - keyboard characters lined up to resemble human gestures or expressions, such as smiling :) - are coined daily. Indeed, almost 60 percent of online teenagers under age 17 use IM services, offered free by Internet providers such as Yahoo and America Online, according to Nielsen/NetRatings.

"All of my friends are on instant messenger," says Garret, not looking up from his cryptic chat with Josh. "It's just easier to talk to them this way."

Chatter - at breakneck speed

Not like the fate of the universe depends on what they're saying. With one friend, he's talking about his rotten Spanish teacher who actually expects the class to participate. With another, he's debating the evening's options: the mall, a movie, chillin' at his house. With a third, he's deep in a discussion about how he never gives more than one-word answers. "who cares," Garret types.

"hey, that's two. getting better," comes the reply.

In between all this, there's a whole bunch of "j/j" (just joking), "lol" (laughing out loud), and brb ("be right back"). In other words, typical teen chatter.

"Instant messaging has just replaced the phone ... for their generation," says Mary Anne Thomas, a Houston mother on the other side of town, with two teen boys addicted to IM.

She has noticed that her oldest son, who's normally quite shy around girls, feels more comfortable talking to them online - a positive, she thinks.

A negative, though, is that their grammar is becoming atrocious, and Net lingo is starting to show up on school assignments: "They talk with these abbreviated words and run-on sentences with no punctuation. I call it speed talking, and it's starting to carry over into their homework," she says.

That's an issue that teachers around the country have been struggling with recently as instant messaging grows in popularity.

Multitasking? No problem.

Another double-edged consequence comes in a culture of multitasking. Mrs. Thomas's oldest son spends about three hours on instant messenger each night. He'll talk to friends, download music, do homework, surf the Internet - all at the same time.

Because of the Internet, experts say, kids today are able to multitask like no other generation. But with that frenetic multitasking, others say, comes easy distraction - and the shrinking of already-short attention spans.

Garret says he gets onto IM when he's doing homework, and manages about eight different tasks at one time. Showing incredible focus - or frenzy - he flips from one screen to the next, rapidly firing off messages while surfing the Net and gabbing on the phone. (No, IM hasn't replaced the phone entirely.)

Now a high-school freshman, he says most of his friends were on IM by junior high, and he picked up the lingo as he went along. New terms get passed between friends, and different groups and regions of the country have their own IM lexicons, with particular acronyms, abbreviations, and emoticons that mirror their inside jokes and experience.

Tonight, he tells a friend that he's "j/c." She asks, "what is j/c."

"just chillin'," he types, certain that she will use it in the future.

Experts say the intent of lingo - in any generation - is to signify "inness" with a particular group. And while teens have long pushed the boundaries of language, they are now doing it in written form.

"This is a new kind of slang, a written slang. We've never had anything like it before," says Robert Beard, professor emeritus of linguistics at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pa., and creator of yourDictionary.com.

Some parents worry that teens could get into trouble by talking to so many different - and sometimes unknown - buddies. Certainly, that's happened. But Dr. Randall says he found in his study that teens are quite aware of that issue and know how to protect themselves.

Even with his large buddy list, Garret gets it. He begins chatting with someone he hasn't talked to in awhile, and when that person attacks him and uses profanity, he quickly ends the conversation.

"I'm not talking to him anymore," he says, slightly shaken, and then uses the software to block all incoming messages from that screen name.

"I guess it's time to clean out my buddy list."

Top IM Terms

IMAO

"In My Arrogant Opinion."

AFK

"Away From Keyboard."

(::[ ]::)

Emoticon for a bandaid - an offer of comfort.

:-P

Emoticon that means you're being sassy or sticking out your tongue.

8-)

Emoticon showing you're wearing glasses - or acting smart.

Source: www.yourDictionary.com


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: instantmessenger; internet; slang; teenagers
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first 1-2021-24 next last
wtf?
1 posted on 12/12/2002 5:26:41 PM PST by gitmo
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To: gitmo
bfd IMAO
2 posted on 12/12/2002 5:31:47 PM PST by DainBramage
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To: gitmo
"5"
3 posted on 12/12/2002 5:35:54 PM PST by cmsgop
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To: gitmo
O I C
4 posted on 12/12/2002 5:37:35 PM PST by EggsAckley
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To: EggsAckley
ic2
5 posted on 12/12/2002 5:43:14 PM PST by gitmo
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To: gitmo
http://www.doublecode.com/cgi-bin/babel.cgi?d=haxor&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.freerepublic.com%2Ffocus%2Fnews%2F805613%2Fposts
6 posted on 12/12/2002 5:50:17 PM PST by Tennessee_Bob
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To: gitmo
wtf?

Your blocked! ;-)

7 posted on 12/12/2002 5:57:45 PM PST by Spunky
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To: Tennessee_Bob
WOW! HDYDT?
8 posted on 12/12/2002 6:00:54 PM PST by Spunky
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To: gitmo
Sounds like these kids are really series.
9 posted on 12/12/2002 6:08:56 PM PST by Illbay
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To: Spunky
btdt

I have been doing online communications since it was BITNET, over 10 years ago. We invented the internet shorthand.

Or, if you will...

bn o/l > 10 yrs nbd

(btdt=been there done that, nbd=no big deal)

10 posted on 12/12/2002 6:09:01 PM PST by freedumb2003
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To: gitmo
Yeah, they're reel 133t d00dz these days. It's really annoying. Even people who email me without using punctuation, I can take, but this netspeak is something else.
11 posted on 12/12/2002 6:12:03 PM PST by JenB
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To: cmsgop
WWCGEBD?
12 posted on 12/12/2002 6:14:58 PM PST by Senator Pardek
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To: gitmo
Where in heaven's name have these people been since 1994?
13 posted on 12/12/2002 6:15:43 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: gitmo
Even more interesting, I think, is the SMS culture that has developed all over the world where people use GSM mobile phones. You're limited to 160 characters/transmission, and you wouldn't believe how someone can cram a one page email into SMS shorthand.

I occasionally get SMS e-mails that someone has sent from their phone. I frequently need to search around the internet to find translations of the terms.
14 posted on 12/12/2002 6:21:47 PM PST by July 4th
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To: gitmo
You see shorthand like this a LOT in online gaming as well. I played Everquest off and on for 3 1/2 years (yes, I know, I have no life) and some of the stuff you'd see people type would just drive you nuts.

"d00d, u give a n00b money plz k thx?"

Maybe I'm a snob because I can type 90 wpm and spell reasonably well, but it always grated my nerves.

k thx drive thru stfu n00b.

}:-)4
15 posted on 12/12/2002 6:23:27 PM PST by Moose4
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To: freedumb2003
Yah... This reporter has evidently never heard of IRC. This stuff is not only not new... it's close to becoming passe.
16 posted on 12/12/2002 6:43:25 PM PST by Ramius
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To: gitmo
Oy, vey! L.A.M.E.!
17 posted on 12/12/2002 6:44:54 PM PST by Revolting cat!
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To: gitmo
(::[ ]::)

That's Darth Vadre's Tie-fighter. Isn't it?

18 posted on 12/12/2002 7:00:26 PM PST by perfect stranger
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To: perfect stranger
that really sux0r that u cant play quaker
19 posted on 12/12/2002 7:09:28 PM PST by MatthewViti
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To: freedumb2003
Let's see - first time online was back in 1977, on the old ARPANET backbone, talking with a friend of mine in California. Using a highspeed 150 baud acoustic coupler modem, with a thermal printer for a display system. I was fourteen.

After that, got back into computers again in 1987, after I got my C-128, and that screaming 1200 baud cartridge modem. What a long, strange trip it's been

20 posted on 12/12/2002 7:32:20 PM PST by Tennessee_Bob
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