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By Georgia Riesse n

By Georgia Riesse n. Introduction. Online social networking and micro-blogging service Users send and read text-based tweets Maximum 140 characters O ver 300 million users T he SMS of the Internet T witter shorthand and language E moticons and articulation

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By Georgia Riesse n

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  1. By Georgia Riessen

  2. Introduction • Online social networking and micro-blogging service • Users send and read text-based tweets • Maximum 140 characters • Over 300 million users • The SMS of the Internet • Twitter shorthand and language • Emoticons and articulation • Differences in language on twitter

  3. Twitter shorthand and language Examples of shorthand • W/-With • TGIF- Thank God it’s Friday • ROFL- Rolling on the floor laughing • OMG- Oh my God • LOL- Laugh out loud • 2moz- Tomorrow

  4. Emoticons and articulation • “Congratulations @MoshCam - if I were 70 years younger and differently disposed aesthetically it would be the perfect app for me ;)” Diagram of emoticons

  5. Stephen Fry and twitter • “I love words-and while I am fond of the condensed and economical use of them in poetry, in song lyrics, in Twitter, in good journalism and smart advertising, I love the luxuriant profusion and mad scatter of them too.” • “Enjoyed The Hunger Game. Elements of cheesiness outweighed by suspense, IMHO” • IMHO- In my humble opinion Stephen Fry with the Twitter bird, both have become symbols of Twitter

  6. Evolution of language • “ Ay me! For aught that I could ever read, Could ever hear by tale or history, The course of true love never did run smooth.” An artistic impression of Titania and Oberon from A Midsummer Night’s Dream

  7. Conclusion • Scholars argue limit of 140 characters, use of shorthand, and emoticons is destroying our ability to articulate • Point of twitter is to post a quick comment updating your followers • Use of emoticons is making language more visual based • Abbreviations is speeding up how language is used • Contributing to its evolution

  8. Bibliography • @twittonary (n.d./2012) “Twittonary.com” [Online], available from Internet: http://twittonary.com/ (visited March 23, 2012) • Stephen Fry (2012) “Stephen Fry” [Online], available from Internet: https://twitter.com/#!/stephenfry (visited March 23, 2012) • Shmoop University Inc (2012) “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” [Online], available from Internet: http://www.shmoop.com/midsummer-nights-dream/love-quotes-2.html (visited March 23, 2012) • Fry, Stephen (2010) The Fry Chronicles An Autobiography, Victoria, Penguin Group • Wikimedia Foundation Inc (2012) “Twitter” [Online], available from Internet: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitter (visited March 26, 2012) • Daehn, Michael (2011) “Five Apps to Help you manage Twitter” [Online], available from Internet: http://blog.anymeeting.com/business-tips/five-apps-to-help-you-manage-twitter/ (visited March 27, 2012) • Beirut (2011) “10 Advance Twitter Tips and Tricks” [Online], available from Internet: http://tweepi.com/blog/2011/04/10-advanced-twitter-tips-tricks/ (visited March 27, 2012) • McNamara, Michaela (2011) “What Marketing Experts Really Think About Twitter” [Online], available from Internet: http://www.businessreviewaustralia.com/marketing/what-marketing-experts-really-think-about-twitter (visited March 27, 2012) • Cool Smileys (2011) “Emoticons” [Online], available from Internet: http://www.cool-smileys.com/secret-emoticons-for-msn-messeneger (visited March 27, 2012) • Adagio (n.d./2012) “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” [Online], available from Internet: http://www.bolshoi.org/balet/dream/libretto.htm (visited March 27, 2012) • Notcot (n.d./2012) “Notcot.org” [Online], available from Internet: http://www.notcot.org/post/33467/ (visited March 27, 2012)

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