Culture Millennials destroyed the rules of written English – and created something better - It's 2018, it's time to type like a teenage Tumblr girl online.

https://archive.fo/NxCUx

The spelling and grammar rules do not apply on the Millennial Internet™.

That's because millennials have created a new rulebook for a variant of written English unique to social media. A rulebook which states that deliberately misspelled words and misused grammar can convey tone, nuance, humour, and even annoyance.

Dr Lauren Fonteyn, English Linguistics lecturer at University of Manchester, told Mashable "something exciting" is happening with the way that millennials write, and it goes far, far beyond our proclivity to use acronyms and "like."

Fonteyn says millennials are "breaking the constraints" of written English to "be as expressive as you can be in spoken language." This new variant of written English strives to convey what body language, and tone and volume of voice can achieve in spoken English.

Fonteyn says that on a superficial level, we can see millennials stripping anything unnecessary from their writing, like the removal of abbreviation markers in "dont," "cant," "im" and in acronyms like tf, ur, bc, idk, and lol. In a world where most of our conversations take place online, millennials are using a number of written devices to convey things that could typically only be communicated by cadence, volume, or even body language.

One such device is "atypical capitalisation," according to Fonteyn, a break from a rule prescribed by standard spelling, which states that capitalisation is "reserved for proper nouns, people, countries, brands, the first person pronoun, and the first word in a new sentence."

"What we see in millennial spelling is different, but not unruly," says Fonteyn. "Capitals are not necessarily used for people (we know who ed sheeran is, it’s Ed Sheeran), or initial words of a text or tweet."

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Dr Ruth Page, senior lecturer in Applied Linguistics at Birmingham University, says that frequently the "personal pronoun ('I') is in the lower case ('i')" which is sometimes used to "play down the person's sense of self."

While we're abandoning capitals for things that typically always required them, we're using them to add emphasis or humour to written sentences. "Capitals ARE used, however, to make words stand out," says Fonteyn. "By capitalising something that is not typically capitalised, you can add subtle emphasis, or irony or mockery." Full capitals are used to denote strong emphasis, or "volume of laughter in lol vs. LOL," says Fonteyn.

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Millennials' use—or rather, misuse—of punctuation is where things really start to get creative. Page says research shows how "non-standard use of punctuation can reflect ‘tone of voice’ or what linguists would call ‘paralinguistic’ meaning." She says that an example of this is using a period (a.k.a. a full stop) at the end of a sentence to "indicate that you are cross."

According to Fonteyn, the absence of a full stop at the end of a sentence is "neutral," but the addition of one adds the "sense of being pissed off," or that you're "done talking."

A two-dot ellipsis (..), in millennial English means "continue," or "please elaborate." And, a three-dot ellipsis denotes an "awkward or annoyed silence," or "are you serious?"

Using the comma-ellipsis to write ‘ok,,’ or ‘you sure,,,’ can convey "insecurity or uneasiness," according to Fonteyn. While a three-dot ellipsis might be employed to convey intense annoyance, the comma-ellipsis indicates a "different type of intensity," of annoyance or unsureness.

An utter absence of punctuation is most often used as a way of expressing sheer unadulterated excitement. "A complete lack of punctuation iconically mimics the way someone speaks when they are crazy excited about something," says Fonteyn. "In that case, you are adding excitement by taking away commas and full stops, which indicate pauses."

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Attempting to bush the bounds of what written language can do in order to better express ourselves and our feelings is the chief use for these devices.

But, Dr Peredur Webb-Davies, senior lecturer in Welsh Linguistics at Bangor University, says it also has something to do with feeling part of a community. Webb-Davies says that internet users can "project an identity for themselves which is represented by the way they type their language." Crucially, "users who write in similar ways using a ‘code’ that might be mostly only intelligible to those in the know, can do this to feel part of a wider community."

For millennials who conduct so many of their conversations online, this creativity with written English allows us to express things that we would have previously only been conveyed through volume, cadence, tone, or body language. But, Fonteyn thinks it "goes beyond that as well," with things like the trademark symbol.

"When TM is added to a phrase, it ADDS something you can’t do in a regular conversation," says Fonteyn. "I don’t think this originates in speech, because I don’t think anyone actually says "the point TM."

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"This emphatic method might actually originate in digital language: they’re not just indicating prosody from spoken language but they are adding a visual joke to it, TM in Hyperscript," Fonteyn adds.

What we're witnessing is the nascent beginnings of informal written English becoming even more expressive than spoken English.

Perhaps we should add "IRL conversations" to The Official List of Things Millennials Destroyed. LOL.
 
Hopefully people drop this sort of schtick and speak and type normally when trying to communicate with someone whose first language isn't English.
They don't. I pull up in streams hosted by people with little or no grasp on english and people start talking using slang and informal vocabulary nonstop. It pisses me off because the best some of these people have is machine translation, which utterly shits on slang when you try to translate it into another language.
 
Dr Ruth Page, senior lecturer in Applied Linguistics at Birmingham University, says that frequently the "personal pronoun ('I') is in the lower case ('i')" which is sometimes used to "play down the person's sense of self."
Milliennials are never known for playing down their lofty, princessly, centre-of-their-universe selves. The lower case "i" is just laziness.

Same for the omission of full stops. Occam razor, bitch.

An utter absence of punctuation is most often used as a way of expressing sheer unadulterated excitement. "A complete lack of punctuation iconically mimics the way someone speaks when they are crazy excited about something," says Fonteyn.

More likely a sign that the person was typing with their brain turned off.
 
Well since I'm a millennial does that mean I should scream racial epithets out loud in public and justify it by telling everyone who gets offended that I have Tourettes? I mean, it is the age of the nu-male after all.
 
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  • Agree
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Of anything the only thing this article really shows about "millennial speak" is that shortcuts are inevitable given the limitations of both the platforms they are using as well as the physical limitations of typing on a phone.

The vast majority of Twitter and Tumblr users are mobile exclusive, and as a result things like punctuation & capitalization often get thrown aside when given the choice between typing fast and typing well. It's why early 2000's texting was pretty much all initialisms when the majority of people were limited to a flip-phone that required you hit the number buttons ten times just to get the letter you want. Reading into shit like "capitalizing important words" in a platform that has no option to bold or italicize shows more a misunderstanding as to how technology effects language rules priorities than it does any real evolution in English.

In other words: it's not that deep.
 
Of anything the only thing this article really shows about "millennial speak" is that shortcuts are inevitable given the limitations of both the platforms they are using as well as the physical limitations of typing on a phone.
That is the true irony of why this has happened.

The vast majority of Twitter and Tumblr users are mobile exclusive, and as a result things like punctuation & capitalization often get thrown aside when given the choice between typing fast and typing well. It's why early 2000's texting was pretty much all initialisms when the majority of people were limited to a flip-phone that required you hit the number buttons ten times just to get the letter you want. Reading into shit like "capitalizing important words" in a platform that has no option to bold or italicize shows more a misunderstanding as to how technology effects language rules priorities than it does any real evolution in English.

In other words: it's not that deep.
We can see how the mechanics were there for it to flourish.
 
Using "deliberately misspelled words and misused grammar" to "convey tone, nuance, humour, and even annoyance" -- rather than context with proper spelling and grammar -- can indicate a lack of theory of mind. An impaired ability to relate to others.
 
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Using "deliberately misspelled words and misused grammar" to "convey tone, nuance, humour, and even annoyance" -- rather than of context with proper spelling and grammar -- can indicate a lack of theory of mind. An impaired ability to relate to others.
That's the troubling part here, assuming an impaired ability as considered normal for everyone when it clearly isn't.
 
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i literally cant tbh

I am literally crying? rn that u didn use a qustiin mark? tbh

Tbh tho, I don't feel this is fair to blame this shit on us millennials, when it's fucking gen z who are the ones doing it. Tho lol wtf etc are about as abbreviated as people I know will get. Gas the younginz.
 
holy shit guys I didn't think you guys would be prescriptivists like this LOL. Language changes to suit the needs of its users you ninnies. I think it's really cool that because of the limitations of texting and messaging, people are finding new ways to convey emotions with punctuation.
 
The article seems a bit sensationalist, but I think it makes a good underlying point. "Tumblrspeak" is a good and interesting way to convey nuances in conversation that otherwise wouldn't translate over the internet in an informal setting. I don't think they're typing like this on their college essays, so what's the fuss?
 
Now that sounds like a very useful degree with many good opportunities.

Most of them involve Starbucks.

holy shit guys I didn't think you guys would be prescriptivists like this LOL. Language changes to suit the needs of its users you ninnies. I think it's really cool that because of the limitations of texting and messaging, people are finding new ways to convey emotions with punctuation.

tumblr turned me into a prescriptivist when I realized that their way of speaking will doom humanity and we will all burn in fucking Hell if we adopt their views.
 
I think this is cool; despite the shitty phone keyboards and the monotonic look of chatting, they have a way to convey emotion through it with various ways of slang. It's not all that bad on one side, but it would be bad for English learners' side.

I don't really mind the lack of punctuation and slang, as long as I can read it and the emotion on it. The lack of the commas will always be a mixed bag, gives out funny results most of the time.
 
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