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- Netspeak:An analysis of Internet jargon
- Approximately 30 million people world-wide use the Internet and online
- services daily. The Net
- is growing exponentially in all areas, and a rapidly increasing number
- of people are finding
- themselves working and playing on the Internet. The people on the Net
- are not all rocket scientists
- and computer programmers; they're graphic designers, teachers, students,
- artists, musicians,
- feminists, Rush Limbaugh-fans, and your next door neighbors. What these
- diverse groups of people
- have in common is their language. The Net community exists and thrives
- because of effective written
- communication, as on the net all you have available to express yourself
- are typewritten words. If you
- cannot express yourself well in written language, you either learn more
- effective ways of
- communicating, or get lost in the shuffle.
-
- "Netspeak" is evolving on a national and international level. The
- technological vocabulary once used
- only by computer programmers and elite computer manipulators called
- "Hackers," has spread to all
- users of computer networks. The language is currently spoken by people
- on the Internet, and is
- rapidly spilling over into advertising and business. The words "online,"
- "network," and "surf the net"
- are occuring more and more frequently in our newspapers and on
- television. If you're like most
- Americans, you're feeling bombarded by Netspeak. Television advertisers,
- newspapers, and
- international businesses have jumped on the "Information Superhighway"
- bandwagon, making the
- Net more accessible to large numbers of
- not-entirely-technically-oriented people. As a result,
- technological vocabulary is entering into non-technological
- communication. For example, even the
- archaic UNIX command "grep," (an acronym meaning Get REpeated Pattern)
- is becoming more
- widely accepted as a synonym of "search" in everyday communication.
-
- The argument rages as to whether Netspeak is merely slang, or a jargon
- in and of itself. The
- language is emerging based loosely upon telecommunications vocabulary
- and computer jargons, with
- new derivations and compounds of existing words, and shifts creating
- different usages; all of which
- depending quite heavily upon clippings. Because of these reasons, the
- majority of Net-using linguists
- classify Netspeak as a dynamic jargon in and of itself, rather than as a
- collection of slang.
-
- Linguistically, the most interesting feature of Netspeak is its
- morphology. Acronyms and
- abbreviations make up a large part of Net jargon. FAQ (Frequently Asked
- Question), MUD
- (Multi-User-Dungeon), and URL (Uniform Resource Locator) are some of the
- most frequently seen
- TLAs (Three Letter Acronyms) on the Internet. General abbreviations
- abound as well, in more
- friendly and conversationally conducive forms, such as TIA (Thanks In
- Advance), BRB (Be Right
- Back), BTW (By The Way), and IMHO (In My Humble Opinion.) These
- abbreviations can be
- baffling to new users, and speaking in abbreviations takes some getting
- used to. Once users are used
- to them, though, such abbreviations are a nice and easy way of
- expediting communication.
-
- Derivation is another method by which many words are formed. The word
- Internet itself is the word
- "net" with the prefix "inter-" added to it. Another interesting example
- is the word "hypertext," used to
- describe the format of one area of the Internet, the WWW (World Wide
- Web). The WWW is
- made up of millions of pages of text with "hotlinks" that allow the user
- to jump to another page with
- different information on it. "Hypertext," derived by adding the prefix
- "hyper-" to the word "text,"
- produces the definition "a method of storing data through a computer
- program that allows a user to
- create and link fields of information at will and to retrieve the data
- nonsequentially," according to
- Webster's College Dictionary.
-
- Proper names also make a large impact on the vocabulary of Net users.
- Archie, Jughead, and
- Veronica are all different protocols for searching different areas of
- the Internet for specific
- information. Another new use of proper names is for descriptive
- purposes. For example, the
- proper-name turned descriptive noun/verb/adjective "Gabriel" has come to
- be understood as a
- stalling tactic, or a form of filibustering; "He's pulling a Gabriel,"
- or "He's in Gabriel mode." Most
- frequently, this type of name-borrowing happens due to highly and widely
- visible actions by an
- individual on the Internet.
-
- Onomatopoeias are also widely found in net jargon, as it's often
- necessary to get across an action
- such as a sigh or moan, without having sound capabilities to send the
- sound itself. Very frequently
- net users will use asterisks to denote such sounds as *sigh* or *moan.*
-
- Semantically, net jargon is also quite interesting. Many, many words
- used in net jargon are taken
- from regular English and applied to new ideas or protocols. For example,
- a gopher is not a furry
- rodent on the Internet; a gopher is a software program designed to
- gopher through the vast amount
- of information so that the user can find what she's looking for. A
- server is not a waitress or waiter; a
- server is another computer that tells your machine what it needs to know
- to communicate on the net.
- A handle is not a part of a coffee cup; a handle is a nickname. A shell
- isn't the thing a clam lives in;
- it's the command system that allows you to enter commands to communicate
- with the machine on the
- other end.
-
- Functional shifts are also often frequently seen among vocabulary on the
- net. For example, a flame
- (noun) is an angry, hostile response sent to another person. To flame
- (verb) is to send someone such
- a response. You use a Gopher (noun) to gopher (verb) through
- information. These finer distinctions
- are learned with experience and time on the net. Context is everything
- when all you have to
- communicate with is your words and typewritten expressions.
-
- One example of coinage, and creativity, within written Netspeech is the
- addition of "emoticons" to
- express emotions and intention. Emoticons, most frequently seen in the
- form of sideways smiles ( 8^
- ) or ; ) for example, ) are found sprinkled throughout electronic
- communication to donote feelings
- such as happiniess, or to express sarcasm or humor. Most Net users
- consider emoticons a part of
- their vocabulary, even if they do not fall into traditional grammatical
- rules. Emoticons are not used as
- words, they are an attempt at expressing feelings without the luxury of
- using one's voice. Using
- all-caps is another way Net users have found to bring voice to their
- written communication; in the
- form of shouting. Net users use all-caps very sparingly, only to
- emphasize very important words or
- ideas, because most readers do not wish to be shouted at.
-
- Perhaps the most interesting characteristic of Netspeak, however, is
- pronunciation. Most frequently,
- a user's first encounter with a new vocabulary word is by reading it,
- rather than hearing it. This
- presents interesting pronunciation differences among different people.
- There is an interesting
- controversy among the net community over the correct pronunciation of
- the word "ethernet" in
- normal speech. An ethernet is a network protocol with a fast data
- transfer rate. Most of the
- computers in offices at Western are connected by an ethernet. In the
- past, Ethernet was the name of
- a specific networking and communications protocol. At that time, the
- word Ethernet was
- pronounced with a long [E]. As the concept of Ethernet networking
- spread, however, the word
- gradually changed to ethernet, pronounced with a short [e], a
- description of that specific type of
- network. In spoken communication, the two different pronunciations
- created a great argument
- among computer users, as to which pronunciation was correct; an argument
- that will continue for all
- time when it comes to spoken communication, and that is absolutely
- unimportant in written
- communication.
-
- The structure and development of the word ethernet is particularly
- interesting as well. It is a
- compound of "ether" and "net," increasingly being used to describe the
- concept of the Internet itself.
- As the Net is a global connection of millions of machines, it is
- difficult for the user to understand
- what's happening to get the information through those millions of
- machines to their own. The basic
- explanation of the structure of the Internet is evolving to use the word
- "ethernet," meaning a network
- that exists sort of like a gaseous cloud, with the imagery of a cloud of
- networking information taking
- up the ether; occupying the upper regions of space. While this is
- absolutely incorrect and inaccurate,
- it does help new users learn to not ask how the net works, and to just
- accept that it does.
-
- American English Net jargon is somewhat internationally prevalent. Many
- terms used on the
- multi-lingual yet English dominated Internet are borrowed from language
- to language. The words
- "Internet" and "cyberspace" are used around the world, as is evident
- when one is cruising the Net
- and encounters a piece of writing entirely written in Norwegian or
- Russian. The only words an
- English-speaker easily recognizes are those internationally understood
- items of Netspeak. Another
- example are the grammatical and vocabulary mutations that English Net
- jargon inspires. According
- to the Hacker Jargon File, Italian net users often use the nonexistent
- verbs "scrollare" (to scroll) and
- "deletare" (to delete) rather than native Italian "scorerre" and
- "cancellare." The English verb "to hack"
- has been seen conjugated in many European languages.
-
- As the Internet and computer online services further invade life in the
- United States and the world
- over, more and more people will contribute to, change, and further
- develop Net jargon as we know
- it today. In addition, more people will find Net jargon spilling over
- into their offline lives. Nothing in
- our world today is changing more quickly than computer networks and
- technology, and therefore,
- no jargon is changing more quickly than Netspeak. As more and more
- specialty words make their
- way into our dictionaries, Net jargon will become increasingly prevalent
- in our written and spoken
- communication. Everyone, not just Net users will become familiar with
- the new words and usages,
- as is already evident in the increasing use of the terms "networking"
- and "cyberspace." As business,
- advertising, and entertainment move onto the networks, Netspeak will
- continue to grow, change,
- and become more a part of everyday communication. This dynamic language
- reflects the very rapid
- development of new concepts and the need to communicate about these
- concepts. As linguists,
- tracking this language development is one interesting way of documenting
- the progression of the
- "Information Age," just as the language changes of Early America allow
- historical linguists to track
- the movements of our early ancestors.
- --
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- \_...._( ) Michael Powell
- |a a )`| Associate of Nothing
- ___ /`._ / / powell_m@ab.edu
- -==[___]\/; \' abb00056@mail.wvnet.edu
- `B-'|_`,) http://ab.edu/~powell_m/
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