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TTFN

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TTFN is an initialism for a colloquial valediction, 'ta ta for now', based on 'ta ta', an informal 'goodbye', approximately equivalent to 'bye bye', 'see ya' or 'laters'. The expression came to prominence, in the UK, during the Second World War.

TTFN is still used occasionally in ham radio as an ending to a transmission[citation needed] but was brought into popular use in the UK in 1941 in the weekly radio comedy ITMA by the character Mrs Mopp. From 1939, initialisms, previously rarely used except by the military, were heard more frequently by the British public. ITMA satirized them by coining TTFN, a "pointless" initialism (no easier to say than the phrase on which it was based) and using it as a catchphrase.[citation needed]

TTFN is frequently used in The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh by Tigger, often followed by a "hoo hoo hoo hoo!" as he bounces away on his tail made out of springs. Tigger's profound over-usage of the colloquialism ushered in a new era of TTFN users, primarily young U.S. adults who watched Disney Channel as children.

'Ta ta for now' caught on with the British public so much that it was often uttered by dying people as their last words.[1]

It was a catchphrase of Jimmy Young, a BBC Radio disc jockey and entertainer from 1967, until he retired in 2001.[2]

It was also a phrase used regularly in the later series of the BBC comedy Only Fools and Horses by Del Boy, and at least once by Corporal Jones (the butcher) in the comedy series Dad's Army. More recently it was spoken in Waterloo Road, a BBC drama series based in a fictional school environment.

In episode 40 of the comedy series Goodnight Sweetheart, Gary's wartime wife Phoebe Sparrow says to his present day wife Yvonne Sparrow "TTFN" when she returns to the 1940s from 1998.

In episode 3 of season 6 of the crime drama series Bones, Dr. Lance Sweets informs Seeley Booth that TTFN is an abbreviated form of "ta ta for now" during a meeting in the Royal Diner.

In episode 9 of season 2 of the teen drama series Gossip Girl, the character Emma Boardman uses the abbreviation TTFN.[3]

It is uttered and explained by one of the characters in Alice in Wonderland, an early adult film from 1976.

In the Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode "Get It Done", it is said by the First Evil in the form of Potential Slayer Chloe, who was a fan of Tigger from Winnie the Pooh, after convincing Chloe to commit suicide.

References

  1. ^ How radio comedy changed a nation BBC News Magazine, 17 Oct 08
  2. ^ Jimmy Young: Too old?, BBC, 2 November 2001
  3. ^ Memorable quotes for Gossip Girl, There Might be Blood (2008) on Internet Movie Database