Social Media Language Mutations
- Par Vubem Fred
- 27 Aug 2019 13:38
- 0 Likes
A new type of writing has developed, mixing letters with figures for economy of diction
The advent of social media has ushered a change in writing which is beginning to affect conventional language and at the same time hampering the ability of students to write properly in school. Out of the desire to make the messages snappy, people write combining letters with figures thereby giving birth to a new type of writing specifically used on Facebook or WhatsApp. It is common to see people write “from me 2 u” meaning from me to you; “UWC” meaning you are welcomed, “4 life” meaning for life, “kk” meaning okay or “sm1” to mean someone. The list is in exhaustive as the examples are abound.
Déjà abonné ?
Identifiez-vous >
At times the messages is accompanied by emoji’s e.g. an emoji with closed lips would depict sadness; with the mouth wide open depicts happiness or laughter and a small red coloured heart to depict love. There are other emojis to depict other human emotions like confusion, likeness or disapproval or a flame to depict fire.
The danger with this form of writing is that it is beginning to make inroads into conventional writing such as the French dis-indebtedness programme referred to as C2D, G8, G11, 24/7 meaning twenty-four hours a day weekly. Even companies are beginning to have names combining letters and figures such G4S Securitor, France 24, Canal 2, Africa 24
Cet article complet est réservé aux abonnés
Accédez en illimité à Cameroon Tribune Digital à partir de 26250 FCFA
Je M'abonne
1 minute suffit pour vous abonner à Cameroon Tribune Digital !
Reactions
De la meme catégorie
En kiosque
Les plus Lus
- Hantavirus Alert: Cameroon Activates Surveillance After Cruise Ship Outbreak 657
- Santé mentale et support psychosocial : les partenaires formés 298
- Insertion socio-économique des jeunes: 3500 recrues à former 588
- Industries locales : le gouvernement veut booster la production 385
- Prevention Over Prosecution: The Paradigm Shift In Africa’s Anti-Corruption Drive 1094



Commentaires