Switch It Up And Try These Synonyms For “LOL”?

LOL and beyond

We canchuckle and . We cansnicker and snort. We can cackle,, and crack up.We can even. There are many words to express laughter—and these are just in English.

Perhaps it’s no surprise, then, that there are plenty of ways to show when you’re in stitches on social and in text messages as well. Of course, LOLlol) is the classic way to express laughter online. The acronym, standing for laughing out loud, dates back to online message boards in the 1980s. Given its age, however,LOLhas since inspired many offshoots.

From internet acronyms like ROTFLOLto the number 555, unique ways to “laugh” using text have always added alittle fun to our communications. How many of these LOL synonyms do you recognize?

lulz and lel

One synonym forLOL is lulz, which is based on a colloquial pronunciation and informal spelling of the plural form of LOL. Lulz usually refers to laughter that comes at someone else’s expense.

Then there’s lel, another playful or ironic version of LOL associated with trollish behavior online. Itemerged on the popular image-board site4chanin the mid-2000s, with itsEapparently a random substitute for theOinLOL.

Be careful: in some internet contexts,leldeveloped a darker side, with some users pairinglelwitha Trollface image, a meme based on arage comicscharacter used by some troublemakers online. (Some might even considerleladankmeme,a meta-meme which parodies conventional internet humor.)

😂 and 🤣

In the mid-2010s, emoji took over, including two popular emoji depicting laughter:Face with Tears of Joy 😂and Rolling on the Floor Laughing🤣.Face with Tears of Joy😂is consistently one of the most popular emoji across the globe, used for expressing varying degrees of amusement and happiness. People may add theRolling on the Floor Laughing 🤣 when something is beyond funny and downright . Both are perfect for use on their own or combined to express laughter online and in text messages.

Speaking of rolling on the floor laughing

ROFL and roflcopter

TheRolling on the Floor Laughingemoji🤣is in part inspired byROFLan acronym meaningrolling onthe floor laughing, of course.

Sometimes pronounced to rhyme with awful, ROFL is found as early as 1989.By the 1990s it became the ultimate combo:ROFL was combined with LOL in ROTFLOL.

Another play onROFL is the roflcopter,a blend ofhelicopterand ROFL. The term was allegedly coined in 2003 by moderators on aWorld of Warcraft IIIforum in reference to a vehicle in that online game, the gyrocopter. Gamers may useroflcopteras a response to something they find extremely funny in allusion to the meme and as an intensification ofROFL. (Dude,roflcopter, that was hilarious!)

Other variants of ROFL includeROTF (justrolling on the floor) and ROTFL, which includes the initial forthe.The possibilities are endless … try one out!

XD or xD

We’re going early internet for this synonym. Before emoji,many people usedemoticons (remember those?) likeXD or xD to convey laughter.XD/xD are supposed to resemble someone’s eyes scrunched closed and mouth opened wide in laughter. Their exact origin is unknown, but they likely emerged in the 1990s and early 2000s. AnUrban Dictionary entry for XD/xD dates them to 2003, while noting they are “better than lol.” That year, others also began to use a phonetic rendering of XD, ecks dee, as a play on the emoticon.

As emoji have become more popular and widespread, XD has dropped in use, though it’s still found online. In some situations, it may be the easiest way to communicate laughter. (But feel free to also use it for old times’ sake!)

kek

Not all synonyms for LOL are funny. Used originally by gamers, Kekis an online term with a similar meaning toLOLorhaha, but it has taken a controversial turn.

The expressionkekin the context of gaming originated from Blizzard’s 1998 real-time strategy gameStarcraft.The game did not support the Korean writing system, so the Korean equivalent to the English hahaha, or ㅋㅋㅋ, became written as “kekeke,” and soon became an in-joke to gamers.

As it turns out,Kekis also the name of an ancient Egyptian deity often represented as a humanoid figure with the head of a frog. In 2015, an anonymous user on 4chan posted information and pictures ofKek, with users comparing the god toPepe the Frog, an innocent cartoon character that has, since the 2016 US presidential election, been turned into a hate symbol by the alt-rightsupporters of Donald Trump. By 2016, Pepe, Trump, andKekhad become linked.

Due to the alt-right’s hijacking of the term,kekhas become linked to the alt-right movement’s ties to white supremacy, anti-Semitism, and other hateful ideologies. This development has been much to the dismay of gamers who enjoyed usingkekas an expression of laughter.

Our next Asian-language-inspired form of laughter, however, remains squeaky-clean.

wwww

All around the world, LOL has some unique synonyms. Wwww (pronounced “wah-rah-wah-rah-wah-rah-wah-rah”)is the Japanese equivalent of the Englishhahahaha, used to express laughter online and in text messages.

The use ofwwwwto represent laughing comes from the Japanesewara(笑), “to laugh.”With the rise of text-messaging and the internet in the 1990s–2000s, Japanese users adapted the kanji笑 to denote laughter (similar toLOL). People eventually found it easier, though, to use the letterw,from the romaji of笑,wara.

Likehahahahaorlolololol, Japanese users string together multipleWsto intensify the intended emotion. Someone noticed that all thoseWs looked like blades of grass, prompting people to refer towwwwaskusa(草), Japanese for “grass.” Also like a curthahaorlol, a shortenedw(ww)can have an ironic tone or even mocking subtext (e.g., Haha, real funny. Not.)

Some speakers of Asian languages forgo the Latin alphabet altogether to express laughter …

233 and 555

Some Chinese speakers use the number233 as shorthand for laughter. This comes from the popular Chinese online forum Mop.com, which has custom, emoji-like characters. On Mop, the 233rd character is a GIF of a small, furry creature pounding the ground in laughter. As a result, 233 spread as shorthand for laughter.

Like other forms of online laughter, the longer the string of numbers, the more enthusiastic the laughing. So, if 233 means “haha,” then 2333333333 is more like “hahahahahaha.”

Thai speakers also use numbers to express laughter, but this use is more onomatopoeic than the Chinese example above. The word for the number 5 (๕) in Thai is ha (ห้า). So, Thai users will often write 555 in Arabic numerals for a hahaha or LOL.

Speaking of onomatopoeic ways to express laughter online …

jaja and jeje

In Spanish,J is usually pronounced with a strong Hsound. For example, the Spanish word mija is pronounced [mee-hah], not [mee-jah].

That’s why many Spanish speakers often will write hahaas jaja. Just like when English-speakers write long strings like hahahahaha to express lots of laughter, Spanish speakers will string together JAs depending on how funny something is.

Spanish speakers will also use jejeje to express (often more mischievous or trollish) laughter, like the Englishhehehe.

MDR and PTDR

The French have acronyms and abbreviations all their own for texting and social media. There’s A+, which stands for à plus tard (“see you later”), JTM(je t’aime,“I love you”), and dak(d’accord, “OK”), to name just a few.

When it comes to laughing, they typeMDR, which stands for mort de rire, or“dying of laughter.” Instead of ROFL, they use the acronym PTDR,short forpété de rire, an expression that translates literally to “broken with laughter.”

With that, you should have plenty of options for communicating your laughter without relying on LOL. Talk about getting the last laugh.

Click to read more
Word of the Day

Can you guess the definition?

mavourneen

[ muh-voor-neen ]

Can you guess the definition?

Word of the day
mavourneen

[ muh-voor-neen ]