Pluggers by Rick McKee for February 27, 2023

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    Templo S.U.D.  about 2 years ago

    Iā€™m that kind of plugger myself.

    I know TBH is ā€œto be honestā€, IDK is ā€œI donā€™t knowā€, ILY is ā€œI love youā€, and TTYL is ā€œtalk to you laterā€, but Iā€™m unfamiliar with FWIW nor MU. Does anyone know without looking them up?

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    Johnny Q Premium Member about 2 years ago

    FWIW is ā€œfor what itā€™s worth.ā€ MU I donā€™t know eitherā€¦

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    Fritzsch  about 2 years ago

    Many of these got their start in ham radio when you were sending morse code. .. -. is CQ, short for SEEK YOU (is anybody out there?). YL is Young Lady (i.e. girlfriend). XYL is wife. UR is your. etc.

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    jmolay161  about 2 years ago

    Good grief! Iā€™m not that kind of texter. Sounds too robotic. Sometimes I use R for Rambo, my little doggie.

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    jmolay161  about 2 years ago

    I donā€™t speak acronymic.

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    jmolay161  about 2 years ago

    Itā€™s hard enough nowadays typing on a small touch tone screen, and also sometimes on a slippy-slide flat laptop keyboard, when I grew up typing on electric and Selectric solid typewritersā€”-moving my fingers rapidly without looking at the keyboard.

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    Gent  about 2 years ago

    Eh me not bother to respond to lazybones who not types full words.

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    some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member about 2 years ago

    I feel this plugger has fallen through a time warp. These are more from the old Nokia days, when typing on the little keypad was work unlike just waving your finger over the keyboard and having it deduce your meaning by magic.

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    Indiana Guy Premium Member about 2 years ago

    As long as they donā€™t think ā€œLOLā€ means ā€œLots of loveā€! Ackwardness will ensue if you send a text along the lines of, ā€œI just heard your Aunt Millie died. LOL!ā€

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    juicebruce  about 2 years ago

    Texting is the modern version of Morse Code ā€¦ One must practice it in order to know it ;-)

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    zerotvus  about 2 years ago

    I know what WTF meansā€¦ā€¦.

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    ctolson  about 2 years ago

    I donā€™t du text short hand as there can be several translations.

    When I was in the military, three most oft used acronyms were FUBAR, SNAFU and BOHICA or BOHHCA. This was long before texting was even thought of.

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    Lori & Paul  about 2 years ago

    FWIW means For Whatā€™s It Worth and MU means Miss You.

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    GreenT267  about 2 years ago

    In the English-speaking world, the first known acronyms cropped up in the telegraphic code developed by Walter P. Phillips for the United Press Association [UPA] in 1879. The word, acronym, was created in 1943, from the Greek ā€˜Akronā€™ [topmost] and ā€˜onyxā€™ [name/word]. Initialisms began around 1868 when the initial letters of authorsā€™ names were used on publications instead of their full name, although they didnā€™t come into popular use until the early 1960ā€™s when acronyms came into vogue.

    The difference between acronyms and initialisms is that an acronym can be (and is) pronounced as a single word, while an initialism is pronounced as a series of letters. FYI is an initialism, TANSTAAFL is an acronym.

    Acronyms and initialisms save time and space for the writer (or speaker) but they can confuse, mislead, intimidate the audience. Many are exclusive for particular technical or scientific fields or geographic locales (e.g., medicine, IT). Many have multiple meanings. Sometimes we forget that writing and speaking is supposed to be ways to communicate ā€” to share or exchange information, news, ideas. Communication only succeeds when the audience can understand the message.

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    Gen.Flashman  about 2 years ago

    Acronyms are a group of letters that are pronounced as a word such as NATO/SNAFU/SCUBA/LIFO/FIFO. Initialism is when you pronounce the letters such as FBI/US

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    ladykat Premium Member about 2 years ago

    I have no idea what FWIW or MU mean and, truthfully, I donā€™t really care.

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    EMGULS79  about 2 years ago

    Well THIS Plugger is slow to respond to texts because although he can type over 100 wpm on a standard keyboard, he has neither the dexterity nor the patience to equal that rate on an itty-bitty phone keyboard. If you text this Plugger, and he considers you important enough to merit a response, he will use his phone as a phone and CALL you.

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    nsaber  about 2 years ago

    Nope. None of them. And clearly NBD!

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    KEA  about 2 years ago

    Have a plugger friend who refuses to learn any.

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    Ken Norris Premium Member about 2 years ago

    Young lovers used to put SWAK on the back of the letters they wrote each otherā€¦

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    SofaKing Premium Member about 2 years ago

    When I got my first CB radio in 1975 I memorized all the 10 codes, I thought Iā€™d need to know them for a license. KBY0794 was my license.

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    wildlandwaters  about 2 years ago

    IHYM!

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    puddleglum1066  about 2 years ago

    Do people still use those abbreviations when texting? In my experience it went out with flip phones. Back in those days, you had to hit a number anywhere from two to four times to get a letter into a text, so it paid to abbreviate everything. But now that we all have smartphones with full keyboards (even dog-man here), most everybody I know just types full words (or lets auto-complete type the last few letters).

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    kathleenhicks62  about 2 years ago

    WT?

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    raybarb44  about 2 years ago

    No I donā€™t. If you canā€™t spell, donā€™t write junk, Call. Itā€™s also a phoneā€¦..

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    tammyspeakslife Premium Member about 2 years ago

    Then thereā€™s the one who makes up her own and expects everyone else to understand them. LOL. Eg. TK for thanks. (TY)

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    tinstar  about 2 years ago

    This is why I donā€™t belong in the texting world. I spell words out, and I have never even used ā€œLOL.ā€ For me, texts are few, and far between.

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    finnygirl Premium Member about 2 years ago

    I agree with those above who say they wouldnā€™t respond to this. An occasional abbreviation in a message is fine. Sending this nonsense to me would result at best in a return message of ā€œspeak English or shut upā€..

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    mafastore  about 2 years ago

    We donā€™t give out cell phone numbers to many people. Our 3 siblings, their spouses and children, my mom, the other board members of our reenactment unit and the other board members of my embroidery chapter. My accounting clients donā€™t even have my cell number.

    As a result better than 90% of the non-spam text messages are between the two of us (especially since husband has rather limited phone minutes). Messages between us generally are of the ā€œokā€ ā€“ ā€œokā€ variety. As in ā€“ Me ā€œokā€ (dinner is ready), him ā€œokā€, me ā€œokā€ (he has come back in from running the RV engine. Or ā€œFront doorā€ ā€“ either of us (this can also be a store department) reply ā€œokā€ by the other. This was used back before Covid when we would go in stores and wander away for something to do and do so separately. It means ā€œI am at the front door and ready to leaveā€ ā€œok, on my wayā€. or ā€œI am in the shoe department, come hereā€ ā€œokā€.

    My sister tends to send text messages while we are sleeping, we donā€™t hear them (even though phone in bedroom) and I donā€™t know she send them until it is time to call husband for dinner or I find the message while out. If neither of these things happen ā€“ it can be days before I find her text messages.

    On the other hand since 4 Presidential election cycles ago ā€œthe other partyā€ has send me spam emails during election time and other times. It started with a local congressman ā€“ not one whose district I am in ā€“ sending them to me and continued to the point where in the last election I received text messages from people running for congress or senate states on the other side of the country ā€“ all asking for money. At one point I was getting over 20 of these a day.

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