Text messaging, with its lack of diacritical marks (accents, mostly in non-English languages), dropping of words, and shortening of words by using numbers for letters and letters for words (C U 2nite!) is widespread in Second Life. Why?
I would argue that it's because those whose first typed communications were on the 10-key pads of mobile phones (mostly young people) bring their 10-key culture with them to Second Life, where keyboards predominate.
I won't get here into the ongoing debate about whether texting is devolving or evolving language, but I will say that when in world I'm not on a cell phone and I really don't want to hear cell phone terseness.
how r u
im gd
u?
vg
kk, c u l8r
ttfn
It is, as Sweetie said when I told her about this post, the linguistic equivalent of fast food. It just doesn't do it for me. In Second Life I want steak and lobster, not Arby's fake roast beef and nuggets made from chicken parts.
I hate getting texting IMs at welcome areas. Want to know why?
It's because I find the senders to be poor conversationalists-- and I'm not talking about their use of texting. It's because they truly don't know how to speak in English. They just seem to have no experience with it.
That's understandable with people for whom English is a second language-- but most are from Cincinnati or Sheboygan.
I have far too many conversations like this:
hi
Hiya.
how R U.
I'm fine, thanks. And how are you on this fine morning?
good
I see this is your second day in Second Life. How are you faring?
ok
I love Second Life. This is my fifth year in world.
cool. ur hot
Thank you, I guess.
want 2 go somewhere
Thanks for the offer, but they're giving me a lethal injection in 30 minutes and my last meal just arrived.
ok
It's like talking to my hand.
It's great so many people are able to text effectively on keypads, and sad they show such an astonishing lack of communication skills at the keyboard.
I dunno. Maybe it's hard to type on a keyboard with your thumbs.
I would argue that it's because those whose first typed communications were on the 10-key pads of mobile phones (mostly young people) bring their 10-key culture with them to Second Life, where keyboards predominate.
I won't get here into the ongoing debate about whether texting is devolving or evolving language, but I will say that when in world I'm not on a cell phone and I really don't want to hear cell phone terseness.
how r u
im gd
u?
vg
kk, c u l8r
ttfn
It is, as Sweetie said when I told her about this post, the linguistic equivalent of fast food. It just doesn't do it for me. In Second Life I want steak and lobster, not Arby's fake roast beef and nuggets made from chicken parts.
I hate getting texting IMs at welcome areas. Want to know why?
It's because I find the senders to be poor conversationalists-- and I'm not talking about their use of texting. It's because they truly don't know how to speak in English. They just seem to have no experience with it.
That's understandable with people for whom English is a second language-- but most are from Cincinnati or Sheboygan.
I have far too many conversations like this:
hi
Hiya.
how R U.
I'm fine, thanks. And how are you on this fine morning?
good
I see this is your second day in Second Life. How are you faring?
ok
I love Second Life. This is my fifth year in world.
cool. ur hot
Thank you, I guess.
want 2 go somewhere
Thanks for the offer, but they're giving me a lethal injection in 30 minutes and my last meal just arrived.
ok
It's like talking to my hand.
It's great so many people are able to text effectively on keypads, and sad they show such an astonishing lack of communication skills at the keyboard.
I dunno. Maybe it's hard to type on a keyboard with your thumbs.
0 comments:
Post a Comment