Jump to content

OK: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{otheruses|Okay (disambiguation)}}
{{otheruses|Okay (disambiguation)}}
'''OK''', '''okay''', or '''O.K.''' is a colloquial [[English language|English]] word denoting approval, assent, or acknowledgment. As an [[adjective]] it means 'adequate', 'acceptable' ("this is OK to send out"), often in contrast to 'excellent' ("the food was okay"); it also functions as an [[adverb]] in this sense. As an [[interjection]], it can denote compliance ("OK, I'll do that"), agreement ("Okay, that's good"), a wish to defuse a situation or calm someone ("It's okay, it's not that bad"). As a [[noun]] and [[verb]] it means 'assent'. ("The boss okayed the purchase")
'''OK''', '''okay''', or '''O.K.''' is a colloquial [[English language|English]] word denoting approval, assent, or acknowledgment. As an [[adjective]] it means 'adequate', 'acceptable' ("this is OK to send out"), often in contrast to 'excellent' ("the food was okay"); it also functions as an [[adverb]] in this sense. As an [[interjection]], it can denote compliance ("OK, I'll do that"), agreement ("Okay, that's good"), a wish to defuse a situation or calm someone ("It's okay, it's not that bad"). As a [[noun]] and [[verb]] it means 'assent'. ("The boss okayed/OK'd the purchase")


The origins of ''OK'' are not known with certainty, and have been the subject of much discussion and academic interest over the years. As an interjection, it has been [[loanword|borrowed]] from English into many other languages.
The origins of ''OK'' are not known with certainty, and have been the subject of much discussion and academic interest over the years. As an interjection, it has been [[loanword|borrowed]] from English into many other languages.

Revision as of 09:29, 28 November 2008

OK, okay, or O.K. is a colloquial English word denoting approval, assent, or acknowledgment. As an adjective it means 'adequate', 'acceptable' ("this is OK to send out"), often in contrast to 'excellent' ("the food was okay"); it also functions as an adverb in this sense. As an interjection, it can denote compliance ("OK, I'll do that"), agreement ("Okay, that's good"), a wish to defuse a situation or calm someone ("It's okay, it's not that bad"). As a noun and verb it means 'assent'. ("The boss okayed/OK'd the purchase")

The origins of OK are not known with certainty, and have been the subject of much discussion and academic interest over the years. As an interjection, it has been borrowed from English into many other languages.

Earliest documented examples

The earliest claimed usage of okay is a 1790 court record from Sumner County, Tennessee, discovered in 1859 by a Tennessee historian named Albigence Waldo Putnam, in which Andrew Jackson apparently said:

"proved a bill of sale from Hugh McGary to Gasper Mansker, for a Negro man, which was O.K."[1]

However, the record is hand-written rather than typed, and James Parton's 1860 biography of Jackson[2] suggested that it is really a poorly written O.R., which was the abbreviation used for Order Recorded. Woodford Heflin's (the Dictionary of American English staffer in charge of the "O.K." entry) 1941 photographic analysis[3] also supports this conclusion.

Allen Walker Read identified the earliest known use of okay in print as 1839, in the March 23 edition of the Boston Morning Post (an American newspaper). The announcement of a trip by the Anti-Bell-Ringing Society (a "frolicsome group" according to Read) received attention from the Boston papers. Charles Gordon Greene wrote about the event using the line that is widely regarded as the first instance of this strain of okay, complete with gloss:

The above is from the Providence Journal, the editor of which is a little too quick on the trigger, on this occasion. We said not a word about our deputation passing "through the city" of Providence.—We said our brethren were going to New York in the Richmond, and they did go, as per Post of Thursday. The "Chairman of the Committee on Charity Lecture Bells", is one of the deputation, and perhaps if he should return to Boston, via Providence, he of the Journal, and his train-band, would have his "contribution box," et ceteras, o.k.—all correct—and cause the corks to fly, like sparks, upward.

Read gives a number of subsequent appearances in print: seven were accompanied ("glossed") with variations on "all correct" such as "oll korrect" or "ole kurreck"; five appeared with no accompanying explanation, suggesting that the word was expected to be well-known to readers and possibly in common colloquial use at the time.

A year later, supporters of the American Democratic political party claimed during the 1840 United States presidential election that it stood for "Old Kinderhook". "Kinderhook" was a nickname for a Democratic presidential candidate, Martin Van Buren, a native of Kinderhook, NY. "'Vote for OK' was snappier than using his Dutch name."[4] In response, Whig opponents attributed OK, in the sense of "Oll Korrect", to Andrew Jackson's bad spelling.

The country-wide publicity surrounding the election appears to have been a critical event in okay's history, widely and suddenly popularizing it across America.

However, and importantly for one candidate etymology, earlier documented examples exist of African slaves in America using phonetically identical or strikingly similar words in a similar sense to okay. (See Wolof: waw-kay, below.)

Etymology

A wide variety of etymologies have been proposed for okay. None is unanimously agreed upon. However, most are generally agreed to be unlikely or anachronistic.

Allen Walker Read, revisiting and refuting his own work of 20 years earlier, contributed a major survey of the early history of okay in a series of six articles in the journal American Speech in 1963 and 1964.[5][6][7][8][9][10] He tracked the spread and evolution of the word in American newspapers and other written documents, and later the rest of the world. He also documented controversy surrounding okay and the history of its folk etymologies, both of which are intertwined with the history of the word itself.

A key observation is that, at the time of its first appearance in print, a broader fad existed in America of "comical misspellings" and of forming and employing acronyms and initialisms. These were apparently based on direct phonetic representation of (some) people's colloquial speech patterns. Examples at the time included K.Y. for "know yuse" and N.S.M.J. for "'nough said 'moung [sic] gentlemen."[11]

"The abbreviation fad began in Boston in the summer of 1838 ... OFM, "our first men," and used expressions like NG, "no go," GT, "gone to Texas," and SP, "small potatoes." Many of the abbreviated expressions were exaggerated misspellings, a stock in trade of the humorists of the day. One predecessor of OK was OW, "oll wright," and there was also KY, "know yuse," KG, "know go," and NS, "nuff said."[12]

The general fad may have existed in spoken or informal written American English for a decade or more before its appearance in newspapers. OK's original presentation as "all correct" was later varied with spellings such as "Oll Korrect" or even "Ole Kurreck". Deliberate word play was associated with the acronym fad and was a yet broader contemporary American fad.

Improbable or refuted etymologies

These range from the colloquial to the fanciful to the enthusiastic to the faintly humorous.[13] Some American literature refers to some of these as "folk etymologies".

  • The first theory applies to Gen. Custer's telegraphed reports of platoon casualties whereby OK "oh key" meant "0 (zero) key (killed)". It may therefore be an acronym for no killed in a platoon, a.k.a. P0K or "platoon fit to fight", a common telegraph message.[14] However, this is anachronistic, as Custer was born more than 8 months after OK appeared in the Boston Morning Post.
  • In German newspapers and printing the term OK has been in use at least since the 1800s; it stood for "ohne Korrektur" (without correction).
  • The German philologist Gottfried Hermann (1772-1848, fond of conjectural textual criticism) used to mark undisputed passages in Latin or Greek texts by writing "o.K." in the margin ("ohne Konjektur", no conjecture necessary = 'okay'), thereby grudgingly indicating to the type-setter that the verse or passage did not need emendation and an older printed version could be used (see E. Fraenkel, The Latin Studies of Hermann and Wilamowitz, JRS 38 [1948], 28-34). This use has been established practice in German publishing houses at least since 1827 (G. Hermann, Opuscula I, Lipsiae 1827, 58 ff.). The last descendents of the Leipzig school of criticism still use this abbreviation (now mostly at Bonn and Cologne).
  • According to William Courson, the English use of "OK" may derive from the Russian expression Ochen Korosho ("Very Well"). However, the initial letter in the second word of this common phrase is not the Russian letter "K", which is pronounced like its English equivalent, but "Kha", pronounced like the "ch" in "loch" or "chutzpah".In Russian it would have appeared as "O.X".
  • Another story is that the expression came from a quality control system in some company, in which some inspector with the initials O.K. provided final approval. Some versions of this story include implausible employee names such as "Omar Kulemsky" or impossibly anachronistic choices for the company such as the Ford Motor Company, where a German immigrant named Otto Kaiser or Otto Krüger or Oskar Krause would inspect each car coming off the assembly line at a plant in Michigan and chalk his initials on the front windshield if it was "OK".
  • In Greek, O.K. is a correctly-spelled abbreviation for the expression, Ola Kala (Ὅλα Καλά, ΟΚ), "everything is fine", which has the same meaning as the American English "okay". It is possible that Greek sailors used Ola Kala in American ports. It is also said that "O.K." was written on the ships or other places to show that the ships are ready.
  • French fishermen, including those based in New Orleans, might sometimes have used the phrase "au quai", literally "to the quay", to mean that a fishing trip was successful (or went okay) and therefore there were fish to unload at the quay. This itself may have been derived from references to the Haitian seaport of Les Cayes (previously known as 'Aux Cayes'). "Aux quais" was also stencilled on Puerto Rican rum specially selected for export.
  • Some people say that okay derives from a signoff from a German general during the Independence War, where "OK" would be short for "Oberst Kommandant"
  • A global telegraph signal was (is) "OK": Open Key—ready to transmit.
  • William Richardson recorded his journey from Boston to New Orleans in his 1815 diary. Transcriptions of the diary show "Arrived at Princeton, a handsome little village, o.k. and at Trenton where we dined at 1p.m." - although some have proposed that this showed the use of the expression in 1815, the original manuscript shows that this was actually part of some alterations that may have been added by Richardson (or someone else), possibly even after 1840 when the term had come into common use. Another possibility is that the writing is of a.h., referring to "a handsome", but there are many objections to this theory. [15]
  • The Finnish word for "correct" is "oikea".
  • The Times, in 1939, pointed out that some bills going through the House of Lords had to be read and approved by Lords Onslow and Kilbracken, and they each initialed them—producing the combined initials OK.
  • In a letter in the Vancouver Sun, in 1935, it was pointed out that early schoolmasters would mark examination papers by adding the Latin Omnis Korrecta, which was sometimes abbreviated to OK.
  • Early ship-builders would mark the timber they prepared, and the first to be laid was marked "OK Number 1", meaning "outer keel No. 1".
  • In early England, the last harvest loads brought in from the fields were known as hoacky or horkey. It was also the name given to harvest-home, which was the feast which followed the last loads brought in. The satisfactory completion of harvest was therefore known as hoacky, which was soon (at least according to an article in the Daily Telegraph in 1935) shortened to OK.
  • Probably the earliest suggestion comes from the Greek. The two Greek letters omega and khi appear in a work called Geoponica in 920AD as being a magical incantation (when repeated twice) against fleas.
  • During the Civil War, the US War Department bought supplies of crackers from a company called Orrins-Kendall. Their initials appeared on the boxes, and as the crackers were of a particularly high standard, the letters OK became synonymous with "all right". This theory was originally put forward in a publication called Linguist, from the Horace Mann School for Boys in New York, although it has subsequently appeared in a number of other publications.
  • During the 1840 United States presidential election, President Martin Van Buren's re-election campaign's publicity used his old nickname: "Vote for O.K.", short for his nickname "Old Kinderhook" (see above). His opponents satirized this with a range of alternative and pointed etymologies: Out of Kash, Out of Kredit, and Out of Klothes all became identified with Van Buren's campaign, and on the floor of the House of Representatives, a congressman from Illinois suggested it meant Orful Kalamity.
  • Several centuries before its first appearance, Norwegian and Danish sailors used an Anglo-Saxon word hogfor, which meant ready for sea. This was frequently shortened to HG, which in turn would have been pronounced hag-gay. A German (Pennsylvanian Dutch) accent, common in north-eastern America in the 19th century (and reflected in comical misspellings cited by Read such as "Vell, vot ov it!"[16]) would render this as as OK to an English-speaking listener.
  • During the Second World War (WWII), when the British planes came from combat, they counted them as they landed and wrote on a blackboard the number of planes that had not came back. When all of them came back they wrote "OK" - 0 Killed.

More probable etymologies

There are three candidate etymologies which are widely regarded as the primary candidates for okay's derivation. The first has been extensively argued for by Read; the remaining two differ materially from other candidates in that they:

  • have widespread verifiable pre-existing documented usage,
  • have verifiable geographic overlaps with okay's first documented instances,
  • have equivalent meanings,
  • do not fit over-neatly into contemporaneous or subsequent political or cultural circumstances, and
  • are remarkably similar in pronunciation to okay (having due regard to the danger of false coincidence, which is endemic to colloquial etymology)

They are:

  1. the acronym of the "comically misspelled" oll korrect
  2. the Choctaw word okeh
  3. the Wolof and Bantu word waw-kay or the Mande (aka "Mandinke" or "Mandingo") phrase o ke

Oll korrect

This is historically the most commonly cited etymology, as it is Read's own conclusion and became widely known following his landmark publications in 1963-1964.

The chief strength of this etymology is its clear written record.

A problem with this etymology is the implication that common usage was driven by the written appearance of a geographically and socially isolated slang term that was alien to the rest of the country. While appearing in written form often spreads and expands the usage of colloquial terms, it is rare for a single instance of written speech to make a term colloquial. The relatively slow take-up of the term by other English-speaking countries illustrates this pattern.

Another problem with this etymology is that the "comical misspellings" were phonetic. "Oll Korrect" (sometimes "orl korrect") clearly suggests that what is being comically misspelled was heard from someone speaking with a non-standard accent, either deliberately or habitually. The semantic similarity between "oll korrect" and the German (Pennsylvanian Dutch) "alles in Ordnung" ("everything is in order/all is correct") should be noted. However, at that time this accent was not widespread in America outside the north-east, which would have tended to reduce the rate of wider adoption of the now-arbitrary slang.

Choctaw: okeh

The underlying theme here is English-speaking Americans taking up a locally-heard Native American word.

According to Read, an English professor at the University of Alabama named W. S. Wyman in 1885 attributed okay to the Choctaw word "okeh", which means "it is so". This theory was endorsed by President Woodrow Wilson. Unlike Read's own scholarship, this etymology lacks a clear historical record. Nonetheless, this theory remains popular.[17]

You know this language that we speak,
is part German, Latin and part Greek
Celtic and Arabic all in a heap,
well amended by the people in the street.
Choctaw gave us the word "okay"…
Peter, Paul, & Mary, All Mixed Up (1964). Written by Pete Seeger.

In this etymology, OK is a backronym chosen for its phonetic consonance.

A serious problem with this etymology is the lack of a strong reason why a word from a language of a group geographically then legally restricted to America's south coast then later the mid-west would be colloquially familiar to English-speaking residents of America's north-east extremity.

Another serious problem with this etymology is the lack of a written record clearly linking the English usage with its prior usage.

Wolof: waw-kay

The underlying theme here is English-speaking Americans taking up a locally-heard African word.

Documented instances exist well before 1839 of African slaves in the Americas being quoted phonetically using words strikingly similar to the now common usage and meaning of okay. For example, in 1784:

"Kay, massa, you just leave me, me sit here, great fish jump up into da canoe, here he be, massa, fine fish, massa; me den very grad; den me sit very still, until another great fish jump into de canoe;..." [18]

And a Jamaican planter's diary of 1816 records a "Negro" as saying:

"Oh ki, massa, doctor no need be fright, we no want to hurt him."[19]

In particular, Wolof is a West African language which has had an unusually strong influence upon (once) colloquial English, with well documented examples such as banana, jive, dig (it), yam, and sock (someone), along with the contested hip or hip cat.[20] Importantly, a key study claims Wolof to be an important lingua franca among American slaves.[21]

"Waw" means "yes" and the suffix "-kay" or "-kai" adds emphasis. A simplistic word-for-word translation of Wolof's "wawkay" is "yes [emphatically]" or "yes, indeed"; but better usage translations would be "I agree", "I'll comply", "that's good", "that's right", or "all correct". The consonance of this last translation with the first documented usage of okay could be significant, or could be coincidence. However, okay's colloquial rather than formal usage strongly coincides with other Wolof words which have migrated documentedly into the American version of the English language, and its earliest documented usage is explicitly colloquial, not to say jocular. Significantly, the emergence of okay in white Americans' vocabulary dates from a period when many refugees from Southern slavery were arriving in the North of America, where the word was first documented.

In this etymology, OK is a backronym chosen for its phonetic consonance.

A strength of this etymology is its consonance with Read's own documented evidence of the craze for "comical misspellings". These typically took the form of phonetic transcriptions of locally heard accents. For example, the German-accented (Pennsylvanian Dutch-accented) "Vell, vot ov it?" Many refugees from Southern slavery were arriving in the North of America at the time of okay's first written appearance and it is likely that Boston residents would have come in contact with Africans using Wolof terms and could well have had wawkay translated for them as "all correct".

A serious problem with this etymology is the lack of a written record clearly linking the English usage with its prior usage.

Grammatical functions

In English okay may be used as nearly any part of speech. When used as a noun, the word signifies approval or consent, as in, "Make sure you get the teacher's okay on that topic." The verb has a similar function, such as, "Make sure you get the teacher to okay that topic." As an adjective or adverb it implies adequate but unremarkable quality: "That sandwich was okay." "We ran okay today." Okay as an interjection takes the place of "all right" or "that's enough": "Okay, I get the point." As part of an interrogative it looks like a Tag question but it actually requests confirmation[citation needed]: "We need to leave by five, okay?"

Spelling style

Whether this word is printed as OK, okay, O.K., or O-K is a matter normally resolved in the style manual for the publication involved. Common style guides, such as Chicago, New York Times, etc., provide no consensus, nor do dictionaries.

Variations

  • kay or 'kay, notably used in Herman Wouk's "The Caine Mutiny" as a filler word by the maniacal Captain Queeg.
  • k or kk — commonly used in instant messaging, or in S.M.S. messages. Commonly attributed to have originated from actor/writer Sean Neil Connell.[22] [23]
  • 'mkay, m'kay, or mkay — in use long before, but popularized by, TV show South Park.
  • Okey dokey, okey doke
  • Okey-Dokey-Pokey
  • Okey kokkey - Used frequently by Giovanni Capello from Mind Your Language
  • Okily dokily — Popularised as the catch phrase of The Simpsons character Ned Flanders.
  • A-OK
  • Okei - used in Norwegian and Finnish, although ok is more common.
  • Okej - used in Swedish. "ok" is also used, but is less common.
  • Okee or Oké - used in Dutch. "ok" is also used, but is less common in the written language.
  • Okey (esp. in Spanish)
  • Okay has also been adopted in Korean colloquial speech (오케이), especially among the younger generations. For simplicity's sake, it is often spelled "ㅇㅋ" in text messages.

Usage

Okay can mean "all right" or "satisfactory". For example, "I hope the children are okay" means "I hope the children are all right"; "I think I did OK in the exam" means "I think I did well, but not too well, on the exam"; and "He is okay" means "He is good".

Depending on context and inflection, okay can also imply mediocrity. For example: "The concert was just okay."

Okay is sometimes used merely to acknowledge a question without giving an affirmation. For example: "You're going to give back the money that you stole, right?" "Okay."

Saying okay in a sarcastic tone or questioning tone can indicate that the person one is talking to is considered crazy and/or exacerbatingly stubborn in their view. "I really saw a UFO last night!" "Okay..."

Okay! can also be used as an exclamation in place of words like "enough!" or "stop!"

International usage

Okay has become an essentially global term, used today in most languages and most cultures around the world.

English speakers everywhere use and understand it.

In Europe the word is widespread and well-recognized.

In Brazil and Mexico, as well as in other Latin American countries, the word is pronounced just as it is in English and is used very frequently. Although pronouncing it the same, Spanish speakers often spell the word "okey" to conform with the pronunciation rules of the language. In Brazil, it may be also pronounced as "ô-key". In Portugal, it is used with its Portuguese pronunciation and sounds something like "ókâi".

Arabic speakers also use the word widely, particularly in areas of former British occupation like Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Iraq, and Palestine but also all over the Arab world due to the prevalence of American cinema and television. It is pronounced just as it is in English (Arabic.أوكي) but is very rarely seen in Arabic newspapers and formal media.

In Israel, the word okay is highly common and almost replaced the Hebrew meaning of okay, which means "fine" (בסדר in Hebrew; literally, "in order") or "good" (טוב in Hebrew). It is written as it sounds in English אוקיי. At first it was considered as sort of spoken slang, but now it has reached the written world such as newspapers.

It is used in Japan and Korea in a somewhat restricted sense, fairly equivalent to "all right". Okay is often used in colloquial Japanese as a replacement for 大丈夫 (daijōbu "all right") or いい (ii "good") and often followed by です (desu - the copula).

In Chinese, the term "好" (hǎo; literally: "good"), can be modified to fit most of usages of okay. For example, "好了" (hao le) closely resembles the interjection usage of okay. The "了" indicates a change of state, in this case it indicates the achievement of consensus. Likewise, "OK" is commonly transformed into "OK了" (OK le) when communicating with foreigners or with fellow Cantonese speaking people in at least Hong Kong and possibly to an extent, other regions of China.[24]. Other usages of Okay such as "I am okay" can be translated as "我还好". In Hong Kong, movies or dramas set in modern times use the term "ok" as part of the sprinkling of English included in otherwise Cantonese dialog. In Mandarin, it is also, somewhat humorously, used in the "spelling" of the word for karaoke, "卡拉OK", pronounced "kah-lah-oh-kei" (Mandarin does not natively have a syllable with the pronunciation "kei"). On the computer, OK is usually translated as "确定", which means "confirm" or "confirmed".

In Taiwan, it is frequently used in various sentences, popular among but not limited to younger generations. This includes the aforementioned "OK了" (OK le), "OK嗎" (OK ma), meaning "Is it okay?" or "OK啦" (OK la), a strong, persuading affirmative.

In the Philippines "okay lang" is a common expression, literally meaning "just okay" or "just fine". They also use it in sms but with the letter "k" only which means ok also.

In Malay, it is frequently used with the emphatic suffix "lah": OK-lah.

In Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese), it is spelled "Ô kê"

Computers

File:JavaScript Alert Dialog.PNG
A typical modal dialog box with prominent "OK" button

"OK" is used to label buttons in modal dialog boxes such as error messages or print dialogs, indicating that the user must press the button to accept the contents of the dialog box and continue. It is often placed next to a "Cancel" button which allows the user to dismiss the dialog box without accepting its contents. When a modal dialog box contains only one button, it is almost always labeled "OK" by convention and default. In this usage, it is always spelled "OK", not "O.K.", "Okay", nor "Ok". The "OK" button can probably be traced to user interface research done for the Apple Lisa[25]. However, modern user interface guidelines prefer to avoid modal dialog boxes if possible, and use more specific verbs to label their action buttons instead of the generic "OK".[26]

On the Radio Shack TRS-80 Color Computer (c.1984), there was an "OK> prompt", which indicated that the Color Computer was ready to accept commands. This is also used in the OLPC XO-1 laptop's OpenFirmware BIOS.

Many PCs from the 1990s performed a memory check during start-up. A counter showed the verified memory during the operation, sometimes suffixed with "OK".

During the boot sequence of several Linux distributions, after attempting to start each service the result is shown as [ OK ] or [FAILED] as appropriate.

In HTTP, the HyperText Transfer Protocol, upon which the World Wide Web is based, a successful response from the server is defined as OK (with the numerical code 200 as specified in RFC 2616).

See also

References

  1. ^ George W. Stimpson. (1934) "Nuggets Of Knowledge"
  2. ^ James Parton. (1859-1860) "Life of Andrew Jackson"
  3. ^ Heflin, Woodford A. (1941). 'O.K.,' but what do we know about it?. American Speech, 16 (2), 87-95.
  4. ^ The Economist, 2002.10.24, "Allen Read, obituary"
  5. ^ Read, Allen W. (1963) The first stage in the history of "O.K.". American Speech, 38 (1), 5-27.
  6. ^ Read, Allen W. (1963). The second stage in the history of "O.K.". American Speech, 38 (2), 83-102.
  7. ^ Read, Allen W. (1963). Could Andrew Jackson spell?. American Speech, 38 (3), 188-195.
  8. ^ Read, Allen W. (1964). The folklore of "O.K.". American Speech, 39 (1), 5-25.
  9. ^ Read, Allen W. (1964). Later stages in the history of "O.K.". American Speech, 39 (2), 83-101.
  10. ^ Read, Allen W. (1964). Successive revisions in the explanation of "O.K.". American Speech, 39 (4), 243-267.
  11. ^ Dr Jim Fay. (2007) The Choctaw Expression "Okeh" and the Americanism "Okay"
  12. ^ Cecil Adams, What does "OK" stand for?
  13. ^ Mike Todd, Where did OKAY come from?
  14. ^ Read, Allen W. (1963). The first stage in the history of "O.K.". American Speech, 38 (1), 5-27.
  15. ^ Mike Todd, Where did OKAY come from?
  16. ^ Dr Jim Fay. (2007) The Choctaw Expression "Okeh" and the Americanism "Okay"
  17. ^ Dr Jim Fay. (2007) The Choctaw Expression "Okeh" and the Americanism "Okay"
  18. ^ J. F. D. Smyth. (1784) A Tour in the United States of America (London, 1784), 1:118-21
  19. ^ David Dalby (Reader in West African Languages, SOAS, U of London). (1971) "The Etymology of O.K.", The Times, 14 January 1971
  20. ^ Joseph E. Holloway, The Impact of African Languages on American English—online repetition of several of Dalby's observations and conclusions
  21. ^ David Dalby (Reader in West African Languages, SOAS, U of London). (1969) The Times 1969.07.19. Also: "independent evidence of the importance of Wolof as a lingua franca among American slaves"
  22. ^ Moraitis, nick.cyberscene.penguin books australia ltd.
  23. ^ Connell, Sean. night flower.lulu publishing
  24. ^ 3 mins and 37 secs http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=RSHziqJWYcM
  25. ^ Apple user interface designers pick "OK"
  26. ^ Microsoft Windows Vista user interface guidelines for dialog box buttons
  • Beath, Paul R. (1946). 'O.K.' in radio sign language. American Speech, 21 (3), 235.
  • Cassidy, Frederic G. (1981). OK — is it African?. American Speech, 58 (4), 269-273.
  • Dalby, David. (1971, January 8). O.K., A.O.K. and O KE. New York Times, pp. L-31/4-6.
  • Degges, Mary. (1975). The etymology of OK again. American Speech, 50 (3/4), 334-335.
  • Eubanks, Ralph T. (1960). The basic derivation of 'O.K.' American Speech, 35 (3), 188-192.
  • Greco, Frank A. (1975). The etymology of OK again. American Speech, 50 (3/4), 333-334.
  • Heflin, Woodford A. (1941). 'O.K.,' but what do we know about it?. American Speech, 16 (2), 87-95.
  • Heflin, Woodford A. (1962). 'O.K.' and its incorrect etymology. American Speech, 37 (4), 243-248.
  • Levin, Harry; & Gray, Deborah. (1983). The Lecturer's OK. American Speech, 58 (3), 195-200.
  • Matthews, Albert. (1941). A note on 'O.K.'. American Speech, 16 (4), 256-259.
  • Mencken, H. L. (1936). The American language (4th ed., pp. 206-207). New York: Knopf.
  • Mencken, H. L. (1942). 'O.K.,' 1840. American Speech, 17 (2), 126-127.
  • Mencken, H. L. (1945). The American language: Supplement I (pp. 269-279). New York: Knopf.
  • Mencken, H. L. (1949, October 1). The life and times of O.K. New Yorker, pp. 57-61.
  • McMillan, James B. (1942). 'O.K.,' a comment. American Speech, 17 (2), 127.
  • Pound, Louise. (1942). Some folk-locutions. American Speech, 17 (4), 247-250.
  • Pound, Louise. (1951). Two queries: Usages of O.K. American Speech, 26 (3), 223.
  • Pyles, Thomas. (1952). 'Choctaw' okeh again: A note. American Speech, 27 (2), 157-158.
  • Read, Allen W. (1941, July 19). The evidence on O.K.. Saturday Review of Literaure, pp. 3-4, 10-11.
  • Rife, J. M. (1966). The early spread of "O.K." to Greek schools. American Speech, 41 (3), 238.
  • Wait, William B. (1941). Richardson's 'O.K.' of 1815. American Speech, 16 (2), 85-86, 136.
  • Walser, Richard. (1965). A Boston "O.K." poem in 1840. American Speech, 40 (2), 120-126.
  • Weber, Robert. (1942). A Greek O.K. American Speech, 17 (2), 127-128.
  • Webster's Dictionary of English Usage, Merriam-Webster, 1989.