windemere: (Default)
[personal profile] windemere
Right, so here's a thought for you this morning. Those of us who have been online for years, if not decades, who have a blog/twitter/FB/LinkedIn/etc account, tend to write in full grammatically sounds sentences when we post, correct? Do you also do so when text messaging on your phone, or is that the time you resort to 'text speak'? Do you type full sentences on messaging services? How about emails?

My problem is this. I use full sentences. Only when I text on my little Nokia phone do I resort to no capitals (because it's awkward to do) and shorten my sentences to the bare minimum. Occasionally I do it on a messanger service too. Never on email. Never on my blogs or other programs that require long entries. I ever try hard to avoid it on FB. I am not a teenager. I know how to spell. I feel no reason to resort to things like 'How R U?' when the real question is only four more characters.

So why is it that I keep running across adults, people who are at least a decade older than I, who cannot seem to type, write or post a full sentence if their lives depended on it? I feel strangely bookended between teens and older adults and worry what that means for our future. Are those of us in our 20s and 30s who type properly doomed to de-evolve when we hit 50? And are the teens today, who cannot seem to spell anything right, going to be the next generation of 20/30 year olds who still cannot type properly?

This worries me. And it's your Wednesday morning 'what is the world coming to' thought.

ION: I have cancelled my afternoon training session in the hope that I can get some honest to god work done today, instead of feeling like I'm wasting time. This would help my general state of 'I am never going to finish this paper' if so.

Date: 2012-02-09 12:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grey-wonderer.livejournal.com
Sadly, I *do* use How R U? Mostly, I use it in texts from my phone, or on Twitter, but I use it. I do btw, brb, lol, imo, and ion. Sometimes, I'm just lazy, and other times I blame my job.

Where I work, they have tons of these little short-cuts.
PTO: Paid time off.
UPTO: Unscheduled paid time off
POS: 'Point of service' or sometimes 'place of service.'
DOB: Date of birth
DOS: Date of service
RT: Right
LT: Left
IOR: No idea what the real meaning of the letters is but this refers to a time sheet with exact details of what you did during the hours you worked. It's not a time card, but something extra that my employers require.

There are hundreds more of these and after doing this sort of thing in company emails all day long, I lapse into it easily in my personal life.
Also, I tend to ramble in letters and emails and if I use the short-cuts, I'm less likely to go on and on for ages.(see length of this comment for an example) Finally, I have more than a few much younger friends, and in trying to understand some of their texts and posts, I picked up the slang myself.
I don't think you will suddenly start writing in this fashion unless you decide that you want to do so.

It really makes you think though. You spend your life learning to use the language properly and to communicate well and then suddenly everything has to be shortened.

I often worry about silly things like cursive writing. Who needs it now other than to sign your name? I wonder if ten or twenty years from now, I will be asked to write a letter in cursive so younger people can gaze at this dead art-form in amazement. It could happen.

Date: 2012-02-09 08:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eldanna.livejournal.com
See, but that makes sense, because it is likely your job influences you very much. And you are right, a lot of it is probably laziness for most people.

The cursive thing worries me. I love handwritten letters.

Profile

windemere: (Default)
Amy

July 2022

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920 212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 19th, 2026 02:53 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios