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How To Say Hahaha In Spanish

55555, or, How to Laugh Online in Other Languages

Haaaaaaaaaaaahahahahaha. Or world wide web. Or jajaja. Or MDR.

Haaaaaaaaaaaahahahahaha. Or www. Or jajaja. Or MDR.

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Imagine you and I are chatting somewhere and one-time on the Cyberspace. Imagine that, in the course of our conversation, I -- and this may require some extra imagination -- say something utterly, awesomely hilarious. Something similar this. Or like this. Or this. Or this. How would yous respond?

You could say the obvious thing: "Megan, that is utterly, awesomely hilarious." Most probable, though, you would say something else, something that better reflects a more natural response to my hilarity. Something like "LOL." Or ":-)" Or "ha." Or, if my hilarity is a little more hilarious than usual, "haha." Or, if my hilarity is a little less hilarious than usual, "heh." Or, if I my hilarity is slightly ironic, "hehe." Or, if my hilarity is slightly impish, "teehee." Or, if my hilarity is excessively hilarious in a fashion that requires some excessive laughter: "hahahaha." Or "haaaaaaaaaaaahaha." Or "hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha."

But, so many hahas, you lot go the idea: You'd find a way, basically, to convey through textual means the uncontrollable laughter I have provoked.

Only: what if nosotros weren't speaking English language? What if nosotros were chatting in Spanish, or Mandarin, or Japanese? In an amazing reddit thread this forenoon, redditors from non-English-speaking countries accept been weighing in on a very good question: "what is internet civilization similar in your starting time language?"

And the virtually-upvoted answers, awesomely and tellingly, accept focused on laughter. Laughter rendered in letters and numbers and characters -- laughter that transcends language but also, online, utterly relies on it.

So, how do you express mirth, on the Cyberspace, in other languages? Here -- haaaaaaaaaahahaha -- is a starting guide:

Thai: 55555
In Thai, the number 5 is pronounced "ha" -- so instead of saying "hahahahaha," Thai speakers will sometimes write "55555."

Japanese: www
This abbreviation, not to be confused (which is to say, often to be dislocated) with the one for the Www, likely originates with the Kanji grapheme for "laugh," 笑, which is pronounced as "warai" in Japanese. "Warai," in bulletin boards and chat rooms, quickly became shortened to "west" as an indication of laughter. And then, much the same way "ha" begat "haha" begat "hahaha," the sentiment became extended -- to "ww" and then "www" (and also, if you're then inclined, to "wwwwwww").

Chinese (Mandarin): 哈哈 or 呵呵
Though laughter is written 笑声 and pronounced xiào shēng, Mandarin also relies on onomatopoeia for laughter: 哈哈, pronounced hā hā, and 呵呵, pronounced he he. Similarly, xixi, 嘻嘻, suggests giggling.

Interestingly, the number five, in Standard mandarin, is pronounced as "wu" -- meaning that Thai'southward "55555" would, in Chinese, be prounounced "wuwuwuwuwu." This is the audio equivalent, a Chinese-speaking redditor points out, of "boohoo" -- meaning that laughter in ane language is crying in some other. Similarly, since the number 8 is pronounced "ba," Chinese speakers sometimes use "88" to sign off, or say "ba ba" ("bye bye"). Along those lines, should you lot want to reward someone y'all're chatting with not just with laughter, just with actual praise ... 8888888888 in Japanese represents applause, since 八 (eight) is pronounced "hachi," which sounds like "pachi pachi," which is onomatopoeia for clapping.

Korean: kkkkk or kekekekeke
This comes from ㅋㅋㅋ, short for 크크크, or keu keu keu -- the Korean equivalent of the English language "hahaha."

Spanish: jajaja
In castilian, j is pronounced like the English language h, so "jajaja" is the direct analog of the English "hahaha."

Greek: xaxaxa
Same bargain.

Hebrew: xà xà xà or חָה־חָה־חָה
Same.

Brazilian Portuguese: huehuehue, rsrsrsrs
Same, with the vowels varying rather than the consonants.

Danish: ha ha, hi hullo, hæ hæ, ho ho, ti hi
Same deal.

Icelandic: haha, hehe, híhí
Aforementioned.

Russian: haha хаха, hihi хихи, hèhè хехе
Same.

French: hahaha, héhéhé, hihihi, hohoho; as well MDR
French uses onomatopoeic laughter variations much like those in English. It besides, like many non-English languages, uses the universalized "LOL" to signal laugher. But French too has a more delightful acronym: The French equivalent of LOL is MDR, which means "mort de rire," or "dying of laughter."

Lid tip and 55555 to Chris Heller.

Source: https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/12/55555-or-how-to-laugh-online-in-other-languages/266175/

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