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Re: CONLANG: abbr
dasher@NETCOM.COM (Anton Sherwood) writes:
>: the initial letter of a word is by far and away the
>: most natural and obvious part of the word to represent it in
>: abbreviations. But are there attractive alternative abbreviatory
>: methods beyond taking the initial letter? (Bearing in mind that
>: one seeks mnemonicity and brevity.)
>I can think of some special cases. Words beginning with "ex-" are
>often abbreviated `X' in English.
I think this is only one instance of a whole class of English abbreviations,
where syllables are replaced by the letters or even numbers they spell:
XTC -> Ecstasy
Toys 'R' Us
Nothing Compares 2 U
and especially chatter slang:
2l8 -> too late
cu l8r -> see you later
English speakers seem to love using "X" for abbreviations anyway, like in
"X-mas" (where, I guess, the X stands for the Greek "Chi" in "Christ") or
in the first street sign I ever saw upon my first visit to the US:
"NO PED XING"
Matthias, deeply disturbed that such 3133t spelling would appear on an official
sign.
-----
Matthias Neeracher <neeri@iis.ee.ethz.ch> http://err.ethz.ch/members/neeri.html
"Computer languages follow the extended Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, which
states that because the Eskimos had 900 words for snow, they decided
to move north." -- Dave Griffith <dave@delphi.bsd.uchicago.edu>