thumb|Use of "lol" in a conversation

LOL, or lol, is an acronym for "laughing out loud",

History

thumb|A person literally laughing out loud in a university [[computer lab]]

In the early to mid-1980s, Wayne Pearson was reportedly the first person to have used LOL while responding to a friend's joke in a pre-World Wide Web digital chat room called Viewline. Instead of writing "hahaha," as he had done before when he found something humorous, Pearson stated that he instead typed "LOL" to symbolize extreme laughter. Although the account is commonly accepted as true, no written record of the conversation has been found, and the exact date of origin is unknown. The earliest recorded mention of LOL in the contemporary meaning of "Laughing Out Loud" was made in a list of common online acronyms on the May 8, 1989 issue of the electronic newsletter FidoNews, according to the Oxford English Dictionary In their research, it was determined that the earliest recorded use of LOL as an initialism was for "little old lady" in the 1960s.

Gabriella Coleman references "lulz" extensively in her anthropological studies of Anonymous.

LOL, ROFL, and other initialisms have crossed from computer-mediated communication to face-to-face communication. David Crystallikening the introduction of LOL, ROFL, and others into spoken language in magnitude to the revolution of Johannes Gutenberg's invention of movable type in the 15th centurystates that this is "a brand new variety of language evolving", invented by young people within five years, that "extend[s] the range of the language, the expressiveness [and] the richness of the language".

Frank Yunker and Stephen Barry, in a study of online courses and how they can be improved through podcasting, have found that these slang terms, and emoticons as well, are "often misunderstood" by students and are "difficult to decipher" unless their meanings are explained in advance. They single out the example of "ROFL" as not obviously being the abbreviation of "rolling on the floor laughing" (emphasis added).

  • trolololol or trollololol: A blend of troll and LOL iterated, likely meant to mimick Eduard Khil's 1976 song I Am Very Glad, As I Am Finally Returning Back Home, which became an internet meme in 2010. Indicates that the prank or joke was made by internet trolls, or the user thinks the prank or joke qualifies as internet trolling.

Derivations

thumb|A 2007 [[lolcat meme, featuring a humorous misspelling of "LOL, what?"]]

  • (to) LOL: Used as a verb ("to laugh out loud") and is meant to be conjugated in the appropriate tense. When the past tense is meant, it is written as "LOL(e)d" or "LOL'd".
  • lolwut (sometimes "lulwut"): lol + wut, used to indicate bemused laughter, or confusion.
  • lawl, lawlz, or lal: Pseudo-pronunciation of LOL. Saying "lawl" is sometimes meant in mockery of those who use the term LOL and is not meant to express laughter.
  • Lel or LEL is a "playful or ironic" corruption of LOL. It is sometimes used to mean "laughing extremely loud".
  • Lolcat, an image macro of a cat

thumb|right|An animated [[ASCII art image popularized in 2004 by memes using the word "roflcopter"]]

  • *G* or *g*: For "grins". Like "lulz" it is used in the initialism "J4G" ("just for grins").
  • kek: A term for laughter that originated in online games, possibly either World of Warcraft or StarCraft, the latter in which Korean players would type "kekeke" as onomatopoeia for laughter. It later became associated with alt-right politics, in the form of a parody religion surrounding the character Pepe the Frog by analogy with the frog-headed ancient Egyptian god Kek.
  • LMAO: For "laughing my arse/ass off". LMFAO ("Laughing my fucking ass off").
  • lqtm: For "Laughing quietly to myself".
  • ROFL: For "rolling on the floor laughing". It is often combined with LMAO for added emphasis as ROFLMAO ("Rolling on the floor laughing my ass off") or ROFLMFAO ("Rolling on the floor laughing my fucking ass off").
  • roflcopter: A portmanteau of ROFL and helicopter. A popular glitch in the Microsoft Sam text-to-speech engine enables the voice to make a sound akin to the rotation of rotor blades when 'SOI' or 'SOY' is entered, and the phrase 'My ROFLcopter goes soi soi soi..." is often associated with the term as a result.
  • PMSL: For "pissing myself laughing".
  • IJBOL: For "I just burst out laughing". Gaining popularity among Gen Z, initially popularized within the K-pop fandom. Not derived from Korean.
  • XD, sometimes stylized as xD, xd, or Xd, is an emoticon commonly used to symbolize extreme laughter or happiness.

Commonly used equivalents in other languages

thumb|right|The continuous radio Morse message "hi hi hi ..." by the first private satellites called OSCAR, beginning with [[OSCAR 1 in 1961 (recording from OSCAR 2, 1962)]]

Pre-dating the Internet and phone texting by a century, the way to express laughter in morse code is "hi hi". The sound of this in morse ('di-di-di-dit di-dit, di-di-di-dit di-dit') is thought to represent chuckling.

  • asg: Swedish abbreviation of the term , meaning intense laughter.
  • g: Danish abbreviation of the word griner, which means "laughing" in Danish.
  • jejeje: in the Philippines is used to represent "hehehe". "j" in Filipino languages is pronounced as /h/, derived from the Spanish /x/. Its origins can be traced to SMS language. It is widely used in a Filipino youth subculture known as Jejemons.
  • mdr: Esperanto version, from the initials of , which translates to "lot of laughs" in English.
  • mdr: French version, from the initials of "mort de rire" which roughly translated means "died of laughter", although many French people also use LOL instead as it is the most widely used on the internet.
  • mkm: in Afghanistan "mkm" (being an abbreviation of the phrase "ma khanda mikonom"). This is a Dari phrase that means "I am laughing".
  • ptdr: French variant from literally meaning "broken with laughter"
  • rs: in Brazil "rs" (being an abbreviation of "risos", the plural of "laugh") is often used in text based communications in situations where in English LOL would be used, repeating it ("rsrsrsrsrs") is often done to express longer laughter or laughing harder. Also popular is "kkk" (which can also be repeated indefinitely), due to the pronunciation of the letter k in Brazilian Portuguese sounding similar to the ca in card, and therefore representing the laugh "cacacacaca" (also similar to the Hebrew version below).
  • חחח/ההה: Hebrew version of LOL. The letter ח is pronounced [/x/ /x/] and ה is pronounced [/h/ /h/]. Putting them together (usually three or more in a row) makes the word khakhakha or hahaha (since vowels in Hebrew are generally not written), which is in many languages regarded as the sound of laughter.
  • ("kkk" or "kekeke")
  • wkwkwk: in Indonesian is used in the same way as lol. Early-2000s online-game and chat culture popularized it because alternating W and K is quick to type; some guides explicitly trace it to gaming chats and Indonesian SMS/keyboard habits with "w" representing the slang for gue, which means "me" and "K" meaning ketawa, which means "laugh". It is also a onomatopoeia.
  • (): in Japanese, the kanji for laugh, is used in the same way as lol. It can be read as (literally "parentheses laugh") or just . w is also used as an abbreviation, and it is common for multiple w to be chained together. The resulting shape formed from multiple wwwww leads to the usage of (草 meaning 'grass', read as ) due to its resemblance to the shape of grass.

See also

  • Face with Tears of Joy emoji (😂)
  • Internet meme
  • Leet

References

Further reading

  • —an early Usenet posting of a folk dictionary of abbreviations and emoticons, listing LOL and ROTFL
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  • Claim to first use.