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Spreeny | 08:44 Fri 26th Feb 2010 | Phrases & Sayings
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Sorry not sure which category to ask this ......... in emails etc when someone puts lol, apart from
'lots of love' what else does it mean?
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Laugh out loud.
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Ahh, thanks very much :-)
Some say, as Boo does, "Laugh out loud." That is, it's an instruction to the reader. Others say, "Laughing out loud." That is, it is an indication of what the writer is supposedly doing him/herself.
In either case, it's nonsense! You can't TELL people to laugh out loud and - whilst the writer may well have laughed out loud...ie in the past...when he/she first heard the funny thing, how likely is it that they are STILL doing so when they come to write about it?
Best avoided, really, Spreeny.
Life Of Luxury
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ROFL = Roll on floor laughing
LMAO = Laugh my a$$ off
ROFLMAO
I had always assumed it was 'Lots of Laughs'
PMSL - P*ss My Self Laughing's also a good one
Lardhelmet's reply just illustrates the point I was making in my own earlier response. In the absence of the letters 'ing' at the end of the P-word, HE appears to be instructing US to urinate on HIM whilst WE laugh!
QM, what it essentially means is 'I found that funny' - so in written communication it's the equivalent of laughing in real life, of appreciating a joke.

But people also seem to use it of their own statemetns to imply something like 'tongue in cheek' or 'don't take this too seriously'. I think that's very valuable. It can be difficult to explain in print, especially electronically, that you're joking, especially given the British taste for 'irony', meaning you say something outrageous in the expectation that people will realise you don't - can't - possibly mean it. Other readers, perhaps not British, do indeed misunderstand and take it seriously, and so blood feuds are born. So lol can be a very useful signifier, the way a laugh or a smile would be in a face-to-face conversation.
-- answer removed --
I know perfectly well what it MEANS, J, and I fully realise I haven't a hope in hell of ever altering it, it's just that I dislike it because it is linguistically absurd. Why, for example, did whoever 'invented' it not make it ILOL for "I laughed out loud/I'm laughing out loud (and I expect it'll have the same effect on you, the reader)"?
...............'don't take this too seriously'.........Well explained jno....Life is too short.

Often seen this ...what does it mean, when added to the end of a sentence... ;-0)
LOL
I don't believe many people NEED an explanation of LOL, Alavahalf, though obviously the current questioner did! I simply made the point that I don't like it and for exactly the same reason as I don't like 'could of' instead of 'could've'...ie its linguistic absurdity. End of story!

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