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2 in leet speek
2 in leet speek




2 in leet speek

NOWAI - "no way!" often used as a response to YARLY.YARLY - "yeah, really!" often used as response to ORLY.Also can be accompanied by an ASCII art image of an owl. O RLY - "oh, really?" often responded to by YARLY.QQ - cry/complain (eyes with tears) or the shortcut to close Warcraft II.It is used to show celebration or happiness. woot, w00t - Thought to originate from We Own the Other Team.wuut/wuu2 - Basically saying 'What are you up to'.rox0r, r0xorz - rock, to be amazing or excellent.own, ownage, 0wn, pwn, pwnage - own means to be superior or better than someone, the past tense is "pwnt".boon or b00n - more derogatory term than noob with the same insult intended.Thought to originate from new boy, new-blood, or new in business.

2 in leet speek

  • newbie, noob, n00b, n00b13, nooblet, nub, newb, nubbins - new, newcomer or new (player), used more often as an insult.
  • Used to show undecidedness, lack of worriedness, or often as a sign that the user has nothing to say
  • haxor, hax0r, h4x0r, haxzor - "hacker", cheater (note: also often spelled with two x's).
  • ftw, 4tw - for the win,when something is successful or desirable.
  • t3h - the (see vocabulary entry: "teh").
  • OLO - LOL (LOL stands for laugh out loud).
  • Typo P instead of O and hitting Z when shift is pressed.
  • OMG - oh my god (variations such as OMGG are also common) OMD ~ (Oh my Dance).
  • h4x or h4x0rz - hacks (see vocabulary entry hax).
  • 2 in leet speek

    They might do this to laugh at new people who do not write words with their keyboards well, might just be making fun of English's pronunciation or spelling. When people write in leet, they spell some words wrong all the time. 3 = E or e or m or w or ω or ∈ or ε or ∩∩.These are only examples these are not mandatory for leetspeak, which is not officially defined anywhere, like most slangs. Most of the time it is only the vowels that are changed and then usually only they are replaced by numbers therefore, it is unusual to see someone use the leet alphabet to spell out a whole word (although there are common exceptions, namely 1337). For example, in the name "David" would translate in 1337 as |)/-\\/1|). l33tspeak uses numbers, ASCII symbols, and diacritics together to make symbols that look like Latin letters. This dialect is used in some places for funniness. The words of leetspeak are usually put together to create a dialect (small language). Leetspeak is a mixture of words (mostly computer-related jargon) spelled incorrectly intentionally*, usually coming from typographical errors ( e.g.






    2 in leet speek