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LOL, WTF? The Origin Stories Of 5 of Your Favorite Internet Acronyms

LOL, WTF? The Origin Stories Of 5 of Your Favorite Internet Acronyms

15th Feb 2016

by Rebecca Hiscott

Editorial Fellow, HuffPost Business

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. Even web historians -- some of whom get paid to study this stuff, people -- occasionally dispute these well-known words' origins.

We decided to take a stab at figuring out the stories behind the "WTFs" and "YOLOs" of the Internet world. Follow us as we dive into the fascinating stories behind the acronyms you use every day.

1. LOL

Meaning: "laughing out loud"
Variations: lul, lulz, lolz, lollerskates
Example: You have to see this video of a corgi puppy trying to get down a flight of stairs. I LOLed so hard!

Before it existed online, "LOL" was common in letter-writing. The pre-Internet version of the acronym meant “lots of love” or “lots of luck."

The online use of LOL might date back as far as the early '80s in Calgary, Canada, when then-student Wayne Pearson coined the term with friends on Viewline, a bulletin board system that was a sort of rudimentary chatroom. Or so he claims.

“I always emphasized (and still do) that it was meant to be used *only* if you truly Laughed Out Loud,” Pearson wrote in a post crowning himself the inventor of LOL.

Lexicographer and netspeak historian Ben Zimmer told PCWorld that the first documented mention of LOL comes from a May 1989 newsletter called FidoNews -- still distributed by the computer network FidoNet today -- which listed it as a commonly used Web acronym.

The newsletter is archived in full at TextFiles.com, but you can see an excerpt below:

fidonews newsletter

2.WTF

Meaning: "what the fuck?"
Variations: WTH, WTF BOOM!
Example: WTF, why does Justin Bieber keep wearing leather harem pants?!

In a post on the blog Language Log, language historian Ben Zimmer says he found the earliest instance of "WTF" in a 1985 Usenet post titled “Ramblings.”

“Upon booting I received a message saying "PLEASE INSERT WORD MASTER,” a user named Jay Fields wrote. “I asked myself, ‘W.T.F.?’”

Other variations on "WTF," in which the "W" stands for “who,” “where,” “when,” “why” and “whatever,” appear in Usenet posts from the mid-'80s onward, according to Zimmer.

3. YOLO

Meaning: "you only live once"
Variations: #YOLO
Example: I downed 15 shots last night and then had to go to the hospital but whatever, YOLO.

Sorry, but you can’t pin the existence of "YOLO" on Drake. The Canadian rapper may have popularized the acronym in his song “The Motto,” but the phrase has been in use since at least the 18th century, when Johann Wolfgang von Goethe used an expression translating to “one lives but once in the world” in the play "Clavigo." Johann Strauss II also titled a waltz “Man lebt nur einmal!” (“You only live once!”) in 1855.

In the mid-80s, Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart named his California ranch YOLO, also after the motto “you only live once," Hart told Vanity Fair.

Even the acronym's modern exposure dates back further than Drake to at least 2004, when Adam Mesh, a former contestant on the reality show "Average Joe," printed the phrase on a line of T-shirts.

In November 2012, for reasons we can’t fathom, the Oxford American Dictionaries included YOLO its shortlist for the 2012 English Word of the Year. It lost out to another acronym, GIF (Graphics Interchange Format).

4. OMG

Meaning: "oh my God"
Variations: OMFG, omgz, zomg
Example: OMG did you see Ben down 15 shots last night? Dude is crazy.

This acronym goes way, way back to 1917, when 75-year-old John Arbuthnot Fisher, First Baron Fisher of Kilverstone, sent a letter to Winston Churchill that concluded, “I hear that a new order of Knighthood is on the tapis -- O.M.G. (Oh! My! God!) -- Shower it on the Admiralty!” (Meaning: “Knight me, please!”)

In other words, even a century ago, OMG was used to say things like, “OMG I WANT!”

firstuseomglettersofnote

OMG’s online use dates back to at least 1994. The Oxford English Dictionarytraced it back to a post on a Usenet forum about TV soap operas that reads, “OMG! What did I say?”

5. LMAO

Meaning: "laughing my ass off"
Variations: LMFAO, ROFLMAO
Example: Justin Bieber is wearing drop-crotch leather harem pants. LMAO!

By 1989, the acronym "LMTO," or “laughing my tush off," was already around, according to FidoNews. A year later, its more crass counterpart was supposedly coined, appropriately enough, during an online "Dungeons & Dragons" game, Slate podcaster Mike Vuolo reported.

According to Vuolo, “Torquin (an elven male Ranger) typed ‘LMAO!’ after Sayaka (a human female Monk) suggested that Daldin (a dwarf male Fighter) might want some hijiki for lunch. (I guess you had to be there.)” Sounds about right.

Even before the Internet, misanthropic youth liked to talk about "laughing their asses off." In J. D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye, the novel's main character, Holden Caulfield, described a movie he saw like this: “It ends up with everybody at this long dinner table laughing their asses off because the great Dane comes in with a bunch of puppies."

Fascinating isn't it??? We think it is! So as a little tribute to the Internet World the EAST END PRINTS STUDIO has created a series of acronyms in print! OMG!!!! This month shop for fun, after all..YOLO. Right?

Original article appeared in the HuffPost Tech. 

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