ru:rǔ。 You mean, it can be used for generations. ~ wait. ~ Cao. ~ what will happen.
Show: Xi. It means excellent, and it means excellent people. Can be used for ~ different. ~ only. Excellent ~. A rising star in Ran Ran.
I: wú。 It means me, mine. Can be used for ~ body. ~ country. ~ generation.
And: jí. It means to realize. Can be used in the ~ grid. ~ the first kind (selected from the ancient imperial examinations, especially the Jinshi). Too much is not enough.
Network language refers to the language produced and applied to the network. Network language is a language produced from the network or applied to network communication, including Chinese and English letters, punctuation marks, symbols, pinyin, icons (pictures) and characters.
This combination often shows special significance in specific network media communication. In the early 1990s, Internet addicts gradually formed a specific language in order to improve the efficiency of online chat or meet specific needs (such as humor and entertainment).
With the innovation of internet technology, this language form has developed rapidly in the spread of internet media in the past ten years since it entered the 2/kloc-0 century. At present, network language is becoming an indispensable part of people's network life.
However, it should be noted that some online languages do not conform to the grammatical provisions of modern Chinese, so they have no teaching significance and cannot be introduced into the teaching field.
Network language is a new language form which is different from traditional print media with the development of network. With its concise and vivid form, it has been favored by the majority of netizens since its birth and developed rapidly. At present, the widely used version of network language is "Floating Cloud Water Edition".
Network languages include pinyin or English abbreviations. Numbers with certain meanings, vivid network animations and pictures are mainly used by internet addicts at first to improve the efficiency of online chat or some needs, and over time they have formed a specific language.
The emergence of network neologisms mainly depends on its own vitality. If those vibrant online languages can stand the test of time, we can accept them after the convention is established.
The emergence and spread of this language mainly depends on the network crowd and a large number of mobile phone users. Internet languages such as "dinosaur, girl, hap less, frog, embarrassed man, Dongdong" often appear in chat rooms.
In BBS, words like "next door, upstairs, downstairs, landlord, diving, irrigation" often pop up from their posts. There are rich and vivid emoticons in QQ chat, such as a waving hand instead of "goodbye, a steaming cup means drinking tea."
There are more and more dialect words used in mobile phone short messages, such as "Leng Song" (in the northwest dialect, the sound of lěngsóng means "do your best"), and so on.
Reference link: Baidu Encyclopedia: Network Language