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ForumsDiscussion Forum → I hope this is "OK" for me to post...
I hope this is "OK" for me to post...
2005-03-28, 1:50 PM #1
"How did the term "OK" originate, and do other languages have an equivalent?"

http://ask.yahoo.com/ask/20050321.html

Discuss :p
The cake is a lie... THE CAKE IS A LIE!!!!!
2005-03-28, 1:52 PM #2
i always thought it was a phonetic version of Okay
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2005-03-28, 1:53 PM #3
I am oxy invented it along with time, space and ham sandwiches
nope.
2005-03-28, 1:54 PM #4
Its short for Okay. Like Genki said.
2005-03-28, 1:58 PM #5
Actually, "Okay" is the phonetic equivilant of "O.K.," which sprung up when people began to mistake the initials "O.K." for an actual word. O.K. came first.
So sayest the Writer of Silly Things!
2005-03-28, 5:03 PM #6
OK?

By the way, SavageX, we've missed you. Come to massassi more often or I'll cry.
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2005-03-28, 5:10 PM #7
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=OK

All things considered, its actually a pretty young word, considering that most of our words at least have roots that go thousands of years back.
Stuff
2005-03-28, 6:10 PM #8
I learned that some way or other it was introduced, or at least became much more prevalent, during the term of Andrew Jackson, who, due to a lack of good education, was unable to write whatever was normally written to approve a bill. He wrote O.K. instead.
2005-03-28, 6:47 PM #9
Quote:
Originally posted by saberopus
I learned that some way or other it was introduced, or at least became much more prevalent, during the term of Andrew Jackson, who, due to a lack of good education, was unable to write whatever was normally written to approve a bill. He wrote O.K. instead.


That's what I learned too, he spelled 'all correct' wrong, he spelled it the way it sounded, 'ol korekt' or something like that, and that was where OK came from.
2005-03-28, 7:32 PM #10
short for oklahoma?
Peace is a lie
There is only passion
Through passion I gain strength
Through strength I gain power
Through power I gain victory
Through victory my chains are broken
The Force shall set me free
2005-03-28, 8:18 PM #11
short for 'old karma' which is the type of karma that is, in nearly every respect, old.
2005-03-28, 10:50 PM #12
Quote:
Originally posted by jEDIkIRBY
OK?

By the way, SavageX, we've missed you. Come to massassi more often or I'll cry.


Sorry about that... I been suffering from "Gonk Sydrome" aka "World of Warcraft Addiction". I rarely make time to post on Massassi now-of-days because of that damn game, hehe.
The cake is a lie... THE CAKE IS A LIE!!!!!
2005-03-28, 11:13 PM #13
Quote:
Originally posted by SavageX378
Sorry about that... I been suffering from "Gonk Sydrome" aka "World of Warcraft Addiction". I rarely make time to post on Massassi now-of-days because of that damn game, hehe.


The difference is, no one misses gonk.
2005-03-29, 6:48 AM #14
I do :(
nope.
2005-03-29, 7:59 AM #15
I thought it was from "oll korrekt".
Hey, Blue? I'm loving the things you do. From the very first time, the fight you fight for will always be mine.
2005-03-29, 8:34 PM #16
Dictionary.com says:

Quote:
Word History: OK is a quintessentially American term that has spread from English to many other languages. Its origin was the subject of scholarly debate for many years until Allen Walker Read showed that OK is based on a joke of sorts. OK is first recorded in 1839 but was probably in circulation before that date. During the 1830s there was a humoristic fashion in Boston newspapers to reduce a phrase to initials and supply an explanation in parentheses. Sometimes the abbreviations were misspelled to add to the humor. OK was used in March 1839 as an abbreviation for all correct, the joke being that neither the O nor the K was correct. Originally spelled with periods, this term outlived most similar abbreviations owing to its use in President Martin Van Buren's 1840 campaign for reelection. Because he was born in Kinderhook, New York, Van Buren was nicknamed Old Kinderhook, and the abbreviation proved eminently suitable for political slogans. That same year, an editorial referring to the receipt of a pin with the slogan O.K. had this comment: “frightful letters... significant of the birth-place of Martin Van Buren, old Kinderhook, as also the rallying word of the Democracy of the late election, ‘all correct’.... Those who wear them should bear in mind that it will require their most strenuous exertions... to make all things O.K.”
2005-03-29, 10:07 PM #17
Omnipotent Kak?
Catloaf, meet mouseloaf.
My music
2005-03-30, 12:41 AM #18
I think that Oll Korrekt is probably the most likely meaning of it. But then again, it could be anything, really.
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