Saturday, March 16, 2019
Internet Shorthand :: Communication Language Computers Essays
Internet ShorthandTranslate the following conversation, if you throw outGUY1 wuz up?GUY2 nm, just chillin, u?GUY1 co, btw did u hear close joeGUY2 noGUY1 imho, hes crazy ) he told julia that he wanted 2 8==D her the mallGUY2 roflmao ) ur right, hes crazyGUY1 4 realGUY2 hey, I g2g, ttylGUY1 l8r any guess on to what is going on? Well, Ill go ahead and give you the basic rundown on what the conversation said Guy1 was commenting on how is friend Joe asked a girl (Julia) if they could have consensual sex in concert in the local mall. Guy2 found this exchange very amusing, as he was rolling on the floor laughing my ass off. Furthermore, Guy1 excessively interjected his own personal opinion that Joe was/is crazy. Finally they agreed to converse at a later date. All that from 43 separate symbols and words. Welcome to the future. However, in my humble opinion, you can exchange the word future with hell. The internet, chatting and the sate of instant messengers have he lped create a subculture of the English langue that is starting to move into everyday life. Its a disturbing trend. I feel the livestock needs to be drawn between the fast flowing conversational room shorthand of internet writing and formal English style before the way we write as we know it makes a basal change towards simple pictures and codes. Maybe part of my opinion is based on spite If I had to learn all the dos and donts of recent English, so should you. But I think its more wherefore just that. I can externalize the writing on the breakwater and its not looking too bright. Dumbing down the language to simplest legal injury can be a very dangerous thing. Dont believe me, flip through a copy of Orwells 1984 and youll see how Big Brother has developed a plainspeak directive. In fact, Im not alone in this belief. In Sven Birkets article Into the electronic Millennium he discusses the devolution of modern language The complexity and distinctiveness of spoken and written expression, which are deeply bound to traditions of print literacy, go away gradually be replaced by a more telegraphic miscellanea of plainspeak (70).
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