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-   -   اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها (http://montada.echoroukonline.com/showthread.php?t=67690)

أطياف ملائكية 03-10-2009 03:48 PM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
never mind........you are welcome

نسمات الربيع 03-10-2009 04:08 PM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
شكرا كثيرا bonbon والله غير كنت نحوس واش اصل هذه الكلمة تقول حسيتي بيا

black horse 03-10-2009 06:09 PM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
: : Professor Allen Walker Read of Columbia University, "finally unveiled its (O.K.'s) origins in a series of magisterial articles in 'American Speech' in 1963 and 1964.What Professor Read discovered was that the abbreviation arose in a humorous manner at a time when Americans were indulging in a great deal of wordplay, including abbreviations, acronyms, puns and intentional mispronunciations and misspellings. The earliest example of O.K. that he unearthed (and it is so far still the oldest known specimen) is from the Boston 'Morning Post' of March 23, 1839. It appears in connection with a note by the paper's editor, Charles Gordon Greene, about a visit to New York of some members of the local Anti-Bell-Ringing Society. (The A.B.R.S., as it was usually known, was itself something of a joke, having been formed the previous year to oppose -- its name to the contrary -- an ordinance of the Boston Common Council against ringing dinner bells.) In an aside, Mr. Greene suggested that if the Bostonians were to return home via Providence, they might be greeted by one of his rivals, the editor of that city's 'Journal,' who 'would have the 'contribution box,' et ceteras, o.k. -- all correct -- and cause the corks to fly, like sparks, upward.'.Thus, it appears that O.K. was invented, possibly by Greene, as an abbreviation of the jocular 'Oll' or perhaps 'Orl korrect,' meaning "All right.' This explanation would seem farfetched, except for Read's finding that it dovetails with such coinages of the period as O.W. for 'All Right,' as though spelled 'Oll Wright' (this appeared in the Boston 'Morning Post' in 1838, the year before O.K.'s debut); K.G. for 'No Good'; and K.Y. for 'No Yuse.'."

asma cherif 11-10-2009 03:57 PM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
بارك الله فيك
Be Who You Are and Say What You Feel Because Those Who Mind Don't Matter and


Those Who Matter Don't Mind

أطياف ملائكية 19-10-2009 08:13 AM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
العفووووووووووو وفيكم بارك الله..........شكرا لمروركم

أطياف ملائكية 19-10-2009 08:16 AM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
اقتباس:

المشاركة الأصلية كتبت بواسطة black horse (المشاركة 832695)
: : Professor Allen Walker Read of Columbia University, "finally unveiled its (O.K.'s) origins in a series of magisterial articles in 'American Speech' in 1963 and 1964.What Professor Read discovered was that the abbreviation arose in a humorous manner at a time when Americans were indulging in a great deal of wordplay, including abbreviations, acronyms, puns and intentional mispronunciations and misspellings. The earliest example of O.K. that he unearthed (and it is so far still the oldest known specimen) is from the Boston 'Morning Post' of March 23, 1839. It appears in connection with a note by the paper's editor, Charles Gordon Greene, about a visit to New York of some members of the local Anti-Bell-Ringing Society. (The A.B.R.S., as it was usually known, was itself something of a joke, having been formed the previous year to oppose -- its name to the contrary -- an ordinance of the Boston Common Council against ringing dinner bells.) In an aside, Mr. Greene suggested that if the Bostonians were to return home via Providence, they might be greeted by one of his rivals, the editor of that city's 'Journal,' who 'would have the 'contribution box,' et ceteras, o.k. -- all correct -- and cause the corks to fly, like sparks, upward.'.Thus, it appears that O.K. was invented, possibly by Greene, as an abbreviation of the jocular 'Oll' or perhaps 'Orl korrect,' meaning "All right.' This explanation would seem farfetched, except for Read's finding that it dovetails with such coinages of the period as O.W. for 'All Right,' as though spelled 'Oll Wright' (this appeared in the Boston 'Morning Post' in 1838, the year before O.K.'s debut); K.G. for 'No Good'; and K.Y. for 'No Yuse.'."

may be it's right what you write.....thank you for your additional information
regards

ilisa 22-10-2009 11:18 AM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
شكراااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااا

أطياف ملائكية 28-10-2009 08:50 AM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
العفووووووووووو..شكرا لمرورك

زمردة الشرق 28-10-2009 11:06 AM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
thnk u so much its a new 4 me

أطياف ملائكية 29-10-2009 09:13 AM

رد: اليكم سر كلمة ok التي دائما نقولها
 
العفووووووووووو..شكرا لمرورك


الساعة الآن 11:44 AM.

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