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\u201cOK\u201d started as a corny joke\u2014a bad one that even appeared in the Slang Dictionary of Vulgar Words in 1864 3\u2014but today it's a completely legitimate word. It's even in the dictionary.
Col. John "Shorty" Powers popularized it while serving in the 1960s as NASA's public affairs officer for Project Mercury, the "voice of Mercury Control". He was reported as attributing the expression to astronaut Alan Shepard during his historic Freedom 7 flight, which was the United States' first manned space flight.
So when \u201co.k.\u201d appeared in print, it was intended to be the shortening of \u201coll korrect,\u201d the humorous misspelling of \u201call correct.\u201d According to Allan Metcalf, author of OK: The Improbable Story of America's Greatest Word, Boston Morning Post editor Charles Gordon Greene, who often wrote witticisms and took shots at ...
Who Are You was the Who's last album to feature Keith Moon as their drummer, who died three weeks after it was released. The ironic nature of the text "Not to Be Taken Away" that was stencilled on Moon's chair on the album cover was noted by some critics.
OK (spelling variations include okay, O.K., ok and Ok) is an English word (originally American English) denoting approval, acceptance, agreement, assent, acknowledgment, or a sign of indifference. OK is frequently used as a loanword in other languages.
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OK first appeared as an abbreviation for \u201cOll Korrect,\u201d printed in a satirical article about grammar, the Economist continues.
Best Drummers Of All Time: 20 Iconic Musicians Who Can't Be Beat 8: Stewart Copeland. ... 7: Clyde Stubblefield. ... 6: Phil Collins. ... 5: Buddy Rich. ... 4: Neil Peart. ... 3: Ginger Baker. ... 2: Keith Moon. ... 1: John Bonham.
So when \u201co.k.\u201d appeared in print, it was intended to be the shortening of \u201coll korrect,\u201d the humorous misspelling of \u201call correct.\u201d According to Allan Metcalf, author of OK: The Improbable Story of America's Greatest Word, Boston Morning Post editor Charles Gordon Greene, who often wrote witticisms and took shots at ...
Rather than anyone purposefully inventing "OK," it's actually editorial joke that inadvertently went viral. It all began in the office of Charles Gordon Greene at the Boston Morning Post, Good Magazine writes. The year was 1839, and among writerly folk, abbreviations were all the rage (think LOLZ, OMG or NBD today).
It's just 150 years old, and traces its roots back to 19th century Boston. Rather than anyone purposefully inventing "OK," it's actually editorial joke that inadvertently went viral. It all began in the office of Charles Gordon Greene at the Boston Morning Post, Good Magazine writes.

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