Quantcast
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 7174

'LEL,' 'Nyahahaha,' 'U Wat Brah': The Creative Ways We Laugh Online

"The passion of Laughter," Thomas Hobbes argued, "is nothyng else but a suddaine Glory arising from some suddaine Conception of some Eminency in our selves, by Comparison with the Infirmityes of others."

This is, Hobbes being Hobbes, a fairly pessimistic view: Unless there's some kind of banana peel situation involved, our laughter doesn't usually come at the expense of others' "infirmities." And that's particularly so when the laugher takes digital form. Online, our chuckles are, more than anything else, affirmations. They are acknowledgements of the hilarity of our conversation partners. And they can, in that, be incredibly nuanced. Earlier this year, Buzzfeed published a tongue-in-cheek list: a guide to the 42 ways to laugh online

Part of this variety comes from that fact that our representations of laugher evolved from the descriptive—LOL, LMAO, ROFL—to the more immediate. Now, instead of simply informing our conversation partners that we are laughing, we represent that laughter directory, with hahas and hehes and hehs (and also hahahahas and BWAAAAAhahahas and all the rest). Now, there are nearly as many ways to represent laughter online as there are simply to laugh. 

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.
eBay

I was reminded of all this, most recently, by eBay. Which occasionally does research into how people use the Internet—looking into the relatively popularity of such things as, say, the :) versus the :-). The research team, using the task platform Mechanical Turk, surveyed more than 1,000 people about how they laugh online. And while a clear majority—668 people, or nearly 61 percent of the respondents—still use the tried-and-true "lol," a hefty percentage also use the less descriptive "hahaha."

Perhaps the most interesting result, though, is the small percentage of people who selected "other" as their laughter option. The eBay team offered those respondents a write-in option to explain their non-hahaha hahas. Below are the answers, verbatim, provided by the survey participants when they were asked how they laugh online. Some ("haha," "jajaja," "heh") aren't surprising; others ("u wat brah," "o boy") are a little more creative. Many ("nyahahaha") are variations of standards. "Lel," for example, is a form of "lol." As the Urban Dictionary helpfully explains

Unlike what many people think lel is not an acronym in the same fashion that LOL is (it does not mean laughing extremely loud, laughing extra loud or similar). Lel (and variations including lal) resulted from the use of random vowels substituted in place of the 'o' in LOL. These vowels were used in an attempt to be different... The word however, in essence, still means LOL.

=-)    
All of the above    
all of the above    
all of them interchangeably    
all of them, it depends on the situation    
any form of LOL    
bwahahahahahaha    
depends on how funny it is lol usually    
depends.. usually hahaha, bahaha, or lol    
haha    
haha    
heh    
heh    
I cant stand tards that say LOL    
Jajaja    
Kind of all of the above depending on how funny I think a situation is or whatever I feel like putting that day.    
lel    
LMFAO    
lmfao    
LOL, LMAO and HAHA equally    
lqtm (laugh quietly to myself)    
lul    
Multiple: lol, rofl, hahaha, hehehe - equally    
N/A    
none    
none    
none    
none of the above I do under stand them just do not use them.    
None. I don't use these abbreviations.    
Nyahahaha    
o boy    
roflwafl    
rotflmfao    
top lel    
top lel    
u wot brah    
Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.



Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.


Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.
Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.
Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 7174

Trending Articles