☼ what do u know about the word "ok" ☼
☼ what do u know about the word "ok" ☼
No
word is more international than "Okay". People use it everywhere.
Everybody understands it. Ask anybory, any Mexican, German or Japanese,
"O.K.?" and he certainly understands you. Some people think the word
comes from America, but nobody is exactly sure where and how it
originated. There are a lot of interesting stories about the origin of
O.K. which is the correct one? Probably none.
Everything is "O.K."
One of the stories about the origin of "O.K." is about an old Indian
chief with a very strange name. The americans were not able to say it,
but it was something similar to "O.K.". This Indian was very friendly
and accepted everything the American colonists said. So, every time
they wanted to say everything was correct, they said it was "O.K.".
But experts who study old Greek texts have another theory. Hundred of
years ago, every Greek teacher wrote "Ola"(Everything) "Kala"(Good) or
simply "O.K."at the end of any school paper which didn't have any
mistakes.
From ancient Greek to America and from there to the rest the world. At
least the world agrees on something - two littles letters!
(Adapted from an article by Karen Kreibohm, in BBC Modern English.)
How about you, do you know another story about that word???
word is more international than "Okay". People use it everywhere.
Everybody understands it. Ask anybory, any Mexican, German or Japanese,
"O.K.?" and he certainly understands you. Some people think the word
comes from America, but nobody is exactly sure where and how it
originated. There are a lot of interesting stories about the origin of
O.K. which is the correct one? Probably none.
Everything is "O.K."
One of the stories about the origin of "O.K." is about an old Indian
chief with a very strange name. The americans were not able to say it,
but it was something similar to "O.K.". This Indian was very friendly
and accepted everything the American colonists said. So, every time
they wanted to say everything was correct, they said it was "O.K.".
But experts who study old Greek texts have another theory. Hundred of
years ago, every Greek teacher wrote "Ola"(Everything) "Kala"(Good) or
simply "O.K."at the end of any school paper which didn't have any
mistakes.
From ancient Greek to America and from there to the rest the world. At
least the world agrees on something - two littles letters!
(Adapted from an article by Karen Kreibohm, in BBC Modern English.)
How about you, do you know another story about that word???
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