• kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Survival words, as you would expect, exist in every language and have existed in every language for a long long time, likely since their inception. It is rare for a word that has existed for a long time to be removed from the lexicon, especially for another languages word entirely (though it does happen).

    A “taxi” as a concept is a relatively recent invention, meaning a word for it did not exist in any language before then. And by the time it was invented, the world was far more interconnected than it had once been. As such, many languages, instead of create a whole new word for this new concept, borrowed the word from the place that created it, which in this case spoke English.

    A similar case exists for the word “okay”. I don’t know if it’s just a legend or a true story, but supposedly it was a way that a former president use to give his approval on documents, stamping it with the “OK”, which stood for Ol’ Korral, his ranch. Regardless, “OK” (sometimes lengthened to “okay”) became ubiquitous and synonymous in the US with approval or acceptance of something. Again, due to the connectiveness of the world that is only a recent development, relatively speaking, the new shorthand phrasing spread to languages where there wasn’t already an equivalent. It is a handy shorthand way to express a sentiment of approval, so many we happen to adopt it wholesale.

    There are similar words, phrases, and abbreviations we use in English as well, sometimes with some anglicized spelling or pronunciation, sometime just a straight carbon copy. Names of foods like “burrito” (Spanish), “beef” (French), “hors d’oeuvres” (French), “sushi” (Japanese), or “cookie” (Dutch). Concepts like schadenfreude (German), a metropolis (Greek), or avatar (Sanskrit). Phrases like “R.S.V.P.” (i.e. “répondez s’il vous plaît”, French), modus operandi (aka, “m.o.”, Latin), Et Cetera (aka “etc.”, Latin), and Faux Pas (French). The more connected the world is, the more language mixing we will have, especially as new concepts arise and are borrowed by others.

    • WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The origin of OK is unknown, but there are many many theories. My favourite one is that it’s an abbreviated phonetisation of all correct - “ol korekt” based on some meme fad that people did at the time. Also apparently that was dock workers that were doing that, from which sailors caught it and they distributed it around the world.