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List of Internet / Usenet / EmailAcronyms: new Slang / shorthands
The following is a list of some common words or phrases that are used. The list is far from being complete, it just contains the abbreviations, which I consider most useful. The acronyms / abbreviations are mostly written in upper case.
2F4U 4YEO FYEO
AAMOF ACK AFAIK AFAIR AFK ASAP
B2K BTK BTT BTW
C&P CU CYS
DIY
EOBD EOD EOM EOT
FAQ FACK FKA FWIW FYI
HF HTH
IIRC IMHO IMO
IMNSHO
Too Fast For You
For Your Eyes Only
As A Matter Of Fact Acknowledgment As far as I know
As far as I remember / recall Away from keyboard
As Soon As Possible
Back To Keyboard Back To Topic
By the way
Copy and Paste See you
Check your settings
Do it yourself
End Of Business day End Of Discussion End Of Message
End Of Thread / End of Text / End of Transmission
Frequently asked questions Full Acknowledge Formerly Known As
For what it`s worth For your information
Have fun
Hope This Helps
If I Recall / Remember Correctly In my humble opinion
In my opinion
In My Not So Humble / Honest Opinion
IOW ITT LOL
MMW
N/A NaN
noob n00b NOYB
OMG OP OT OTOH
PEBKAC POV
ROFL RTFM
SCNR
TBA TBC TIA
THX TNX TQ
TYT TTYL
w00t WFM WTF WTH
YMMD
YMMV
In other words In this thread Laugh out loud
Mark My Words
Not Available / Applicable Not a Number
Newbie
None of your business
Oh my God
Original Poster, Original Post Off Topic
On The Other Hand
Problem exists between keyboard and chair Point of view
Rolling on the floor laughing Read the fucking manual
Sorry, Could Not Resist
To be announced
To be continued / To be confirmed Thanks in advance
Thanks Thank You
Take your time Talk to you later
Whoomp, there it is; meaning "Hooray" Works For Me
What The Fuck
What The Hell / What the Heck
You made my Day
Your mileage may vary
50 Rules forWriting Good -Writing tips
One of the more popular items that circulate through the network of folk faxology is a perverse set of rules along the lines of Thimk, We Never Make Mistakes and (this one runs off the page) PlanAhe.... These injunctions call attention to the very mistakes they seek to enjoin. English teachers, students, scientists and (scientific) writers have been circulating a list of self-contradictory rules of usage for more than a century, and have been collecting and creating them
for almost half of one. Whatever you think of these slightly cracked nuggets of rhetorical wisdom, just remember that all generalizations are bad.
1. Each pronoun should agree with their antecedent. 2. Between you and I, case is important.
3. A writer must be sure to avoid using sexist pronouns in his writing. 4. Verbs has to agree with their subjects.
5. Don`t be a person whom people realize confuses who and whom. 6. Never use no double negatives.
7. Never use a preposition to end a sentence with. That is something up with which your readers will not put.
8. When writing, participles must not be dangled.
9. Be careful to never, under any circumstances, split infinitives. 10. Hopefully, you won`t float your adverbs.
11. A writer must not shift your point of view.
12. Lay down and die before using a transitive verb without an object. 13. Join clauses good, like a conjunction should.
14. The passive voice should be avoided. 15. About sentence fragments.
16. Don`t verb nouns.
17. In letters themes reports and ad use commas to separate items in a series. 18. Don`t use commas, that aren`t necessary.
19. "Don`t overuse `quotation marks.`"
20. Parenthetical remarks (however relevant) are (if the truth be told) superfluous. 21. Contractions won`t, don`t and can`t help your writing voice.
22. Don`t write run-on sentences they are hard to read. 23. Don`t forget to use end punctuation
24. Its important to use apostrophe`s in the right places. 25. Don`t abbrev.
26. Don`t overuse exclamation marks!!! 27. Resist Unnecessary Capitalization. 28. Avoid mispellings.
29. Check to see if you any words out. 30. One word sentences? Eliminate.
31. Avoid annoying, affected, and awkward alliterations, always. 32. Never, ever use repetitive redundancies.
33. The bottom line is to bag trendy locutions that sound flaky.
34. By observing the distinctions between adjectives and adverbs, you will treat your readers real good.
35. Parallel structure will help you in writing more effective sentences and to express yourself more gracefully.
36. In my own personal opinion at this point of time, I think that authors, when they are writing, should not get into the habit of making use of too many unnecessary words that they don`t really need.
37. Foreign words and phrases are the reader`s bete noire and are not apropos. 38. Who needs rhetorical questions?
39. Always go in search for the correct idiom. 40. Do not cast statements in the negative form.
[Source:unknown]
ATranslation of common Scientific Research Phrases [Source: unknown]
This list of phrases and their translations might help you understand the mysterious language of science in general and medicine / biology specifically. These special phrases are also applicable to anyone working on a Ph.D. dissertation or academic paper at a university anywhere on earth.
Research Phrases
It has long been known ...
A definite trend is evident ...
Of great theoretical and practical importance ... While it has not been possible to provide definite answers to these questions ...
Three of the samples were chosen for detailed study ...
Typical results are shown ...
These results will be shown in a subsequent report...
The most reliable results are those obtained by Jones ...
It is believed that...
It is generally believed that ...
Translation / Meaning
I didn`t look up the original reference. These data are practically meaningless. Interesting to me.
An unsuccessful experiment, but I still hope to get it published.
The results of the others didn`t make any sense.
This is the prettiest graph.
I might get around to this sometime, if I`m pushed / funded.
He was my graduate assistant.
I think.
A couple of other people think so, too.
It is clear that much additional work will be I don`t understand it. required before a complete understanding of the
phenomenon occurs ...
Correct within an order of magnitude ... In my experience ...
In case after case ... In a series of cases ...
According to statistical analysis.
A statistically oriented projection of the significance of these findings.
Wrong. Once. Twice. Thrice.
Rumor has it. A wild guess.
Thanks are due to Joe Blotz for assistance with Blotz did the work and Frink explained to me the experiment and to George Frink for valuablewhat it meant.
discussions ...
A careful analysis of obtainable data... Three pages of notes were obliterated when I knocked over a glass of wine.
It is hoped that this study will stimulate further I quit. investigation in this field ...
Different Terms / Categories fordifferent Types ofWriting
• Extended Abstract • Conference Paper • Journal Paper
• Thesis
• Correspondence • Proposal
• Instruction • User Guide • Presentation
• Report (technical, management) • Web presentation
• Tutorial • Textbook
• Literature
...
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