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-   -   What does OK stand for? (http://www.freewebspace.net/forums/showthread.php?t=43046)

TRUNKS May 5th, 2003 02:28

What does OK stand for?
 
Well?!!?!?:P I seriously want to know!

Akalon May 5th, 2003 02:35

Buddy, it's short for 'okay'....

http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=okay

[edit] or not,
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.”

is0lized May 5th, 2003 02:37

Okey Dokey?

TRUNKS May 5th, 2003 02:39

Aw F**K! :( I didnt realise . :P Ohwell.
I am an idiot. :P

is0lized May 5th, 2003 04:54

It's ok, you speak aussie

conkermaniac May 5th, 2003 05:04

OK = Old Kinderhook

This was President Martin van Buren's nickname, as he was born in Kinderhook, NY. :)

Bruce May 5th, 2003 05:17

Quote:

Originally posted by conkermaniac
OK = Old Kinderhook
No, that's O.K.

OK is okay.

is0lized May 5th, 2003 05:24

Quote:

Originally posted by Bruce
No, that's O.K.

OK is okay.

Hehe, mixup

conkermaniac May 5th, 2003 05:47

Quote:

Originally posted by Bruce
No, that's O.K.

OK is okay.

OK is shorthand for O.K. People got tired of writing those periods, I guess. :biggrin2:

velton May 5th, 2003 05:53

ok :D

stabme May 5th, 2003 17:32

Quote:

This is what we know of OK so far. It is largely based on the research of Allen Walker Read as set forth in much greater detail in several issues of American Speech in 1963 and 1964. Professor Read seems rather to expect earlier evidence to be unearthed--a small-town Illinois newspaper in 1840 claimed that the abbreviation craze originated in Chicago in 1835--but it has not been discovered yet. The earliest unequivocal O.K.'s are found in Elizabethan English--one in a work written by Gabriel Harvey in 1593 that calls "H.N. an O.K." and repeating of the same in a 1596 work by Thomas Nashe, replying to Harvey. No one has figured out what this O.K. stands for, but it is clearly a noun and not the American OK.
http://www.m-w.com/whist/ok.htm

4lon3 May 6th, 2003 02:41

OK = Objection Killed


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