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Olympic diver Tom Daley's father past away

The word is ¡°OK,¡± the most frequently spoken all-purpose expression on the planet ¡ª and it celebrated its 176th anniversary on March 23 this year.¡°OK¡±ÊÇÈ«ÇòʹÓÃÆµÂÊ×î¸ßµÄ¡¢×îͨÓõĴÊÓ½ñÄê3ÔÂ23ÈÕ£¬ËüÒѾ176ËêÁË¡£
The term was born during a 19th-century abbreviation craze and went on to international renown, with its own hand gesture, even. ¡°OK¡±µ®ÉúÓÚ19ÊÀ¼ÍµÄËõд³±ÖУ¬ºóÀ´¸úËüµÄÊÖÊÆÒ»Æðºì±éÁËÈ«Çò¡£
Last year, one New Yorker carried the linguistic torch. Henry Nass, a 64-year-old retired English tutor from the Upper West Side, had spent the last few weeks handing out cards championing ¡°Global OK Day¡± in advance of the coming anniversary.È¥Ä꣬һ¸öŦԼÈ˾Ù×ÅÕâ¸öÓïÑÔѧÉϵÄÒ«ÑÛ»ð¾æ±¼×ßÐû´«£¬ÔÚÖÜÄê¼ÍÄîÈÕÀ´ÁÙ֮ǰ£¬ÃÀ¹úŦԼÊÐÉÏÎ÷Çø64ËêµÄÍËÐÝÓ¢Óï½ÌʦºàÀû¡¤ÄÉ˹ÒѾÁ¬Ðø¼¸ÖÜÔÚ½ÖÍ·ÅÉ·¢³«µ¼ ¡°¹ú¼ÊOKÈÕ¡±µÄ¿¨Æ¬¡£
¡°No matter where people are from they use the word ¡®OK,¡¯ but they don¡¯t know where it comes from,¡± said Nass. ¡°The problem is because it¡¯s just, you know, OK.¡±ÄÉ˹˵£º¡°ÊÀ½ç¸÷µØµÄÈ˶¼»á˵OK£¬µ«ËûÃDz¢²»ÖªµÀÕâ¸ö´ÊÓïµÄÀ´Ô´£¬ÔÒò¿ÉÄÜÊÇÕâ¸ö´ÊÕæµÄÌ«ÆÕ¼°ÁË¡£¡±
The word is OK, perhaps, but its history is definitely better than average. Late etymologist Allen Walker Read traced the two-letter word to 1839, when editors at the Boston Morning Post signed off on articles as ¡°all correct¡± with a winking ¡°OK¡± or ¡°oll korrect.¡±¡°OK¡±Õâ¸ö´Ê¿ÉÄÜºÜÆÕ¼°£¬µ«ÊÇËüµÄÀúÊ·¾ø¶Ô²»¹»ÆÕ¼°¡£ÒѹʴÊԴѧ¼Ò°¬Âס¤ÎÖ¿Ë¡¤ÀïµÂÔøÈÏΪOKµÄÀúʷʼÓÚ1839Äê¡£µ±Ê±£¬¡¶²¨Ê¿¶ÙÔ籨¡·µÄ±à¼ÃÇÔÚÇ©ÊðÎÄÕÂʱÓüòÃ÷µÄ¡°OK¡±»ò¡°oll korrect¡±À´±íʾ¡°ÍêÈ«ÕýÈ·¡±(all correct)¡£

The word made it into print on March 23 of that year, during a weird inside-baseball tirade against a rival editor in Providence who had alleged, wrongly, that a band of Bostonians headed to New York would pass through the Rhode Island capital.ͬһÄêµÄ3ÔÂ23ÈÕ£¬OKµÚÒ»´ÎµÇÉϱ¨Ö½£¬¡¶²¨Ê¿¶ÙÔ籨¡·ÔÚһƪ¹¥»÷ÆÕÂÞά¶Ù˹µÄÒ»¸ö±à¼¶ÔÊÖµÄÎÄÕÂÀïʹÓÃÁËÕâ¸ö´ÊÓï¡£Õâ¸ö±à¼´íÎ󵨶ÏÑÔһȺǰÍùŦԼµÄ²¨Ê¿¶ÙÈ˽«»á;¾ÃÀ¹úÂ޵õºÖݵÄÊ׸®£¨¼´ÆÕÂÞά¶Ù˹£©¡£
¡°We said not a word about our deputation passing ¡®through the city¡¯ of Providence,¡± the Morning Post reported. ¡°O.K. ¡ª all correct.¡±¡¶²¨Ê¿¶ÙÔ籨¡·±¨µÀ£º¡°ÎÒÃÇ´ÓÀ´Ã»Ëµ¹ýÎÒÃÇ´ú±íÍŽ«»á¡®Í¾¾ÆÕÂÞά¶Ù˹¡¯O.K. ¡ª¡ªÍêÈ«ÕýÈ·¡£¡±
The humor of the Providence-Boston joke has been lost to history ¡ª but the word OK took off from there, soon connoting agreement, acceptance, mediocrity, endorsement, quality or likability.Õâ¸ö¹ØÓÚÆÕÂÞάµÇ˹ºÍ²¨Ê¿¶ÙµÄЦ»°ÒѾÊǹýÈ¥µÄÀúÊ·ÁË£¬µ«ÊÇOKÕâ¸ö´Ê´Ó´Ë·çÃÒ£¬ºÜ¿ì¾Í°üº¬ÁËͬÒâ¡¢½ÓÊÜ¡¢ÆÕͨ¡¢Ö§³Ö¡¢°ô¼«Á˺Ϳɰ®µÄÒâ˼¡£
By 1840, it served as a slogan for President Martin Van Buren¡¯s unsuccessful reelection campaign. ¡°Old Kinderhook is OK,¡± posters proclaimed, a reference to the eighth president¡¯s birthplace and his partisans¡¯ belief in his generally satisfactory performance.ÔÚ1840Ä꣬OK³ÉΪÃÀ¹ú×ÜͳÂí¶¡¡¤·¶²¼Â×¾ºÑ¡Á¬ÈεÄÐû´«±êÓËäÈ»·¶²¼Â××îºóʧ°ÜÁË¡£º£±¨ÉÏд×Å¡°½ðµÂºú¿ËºÜOK¡±£¬½ðµÂºú¿ËÖ¸µÄÊÇÕâλµÚ°ËÈÎÃÀ¹ú×ÜͳµÄ³öÉúµØ¡£Õâ¾ä¿ÚºÅÏÔʾÁ˸úËæÂí¶¡¡¤·¶²¼Â׵ĵ³ÅɶÔËûµÄÕþÖαíÏÖ×ÜÌåÉÏ»¹ÊDZȽÏÂúÒâµÄ¡£
OK was picked up by telegraph operators as an easy abbreviation to say they received transmission, and in 1969, Buzz Aldrin¡¯s first words spoken on the moon were ¡°OK. Engine stop,¡± says Allan Metcalf, author of ¡°OK: The Improbable Story of America¡¯s Greatest Word.¡±OKÔçÏȱ»µç±¨Ô±Ãǹ㷺ʹÓã¬ÊDZí´ïËûÃǽÓÊճɹ¦µÄ¼òÒ×Ëõд¡£¡¶OK£ºÃÀ¹ú×îΰ´ó´ÊÓï²»¿É˼ÒéµÄ¹ÊÊ¡·Ò»Êé×÷Õß°¬Âס¤Ã·ÌØ¿¨·ò˵£º¡°ÔÚ1969Ä꣬ÓԱ°Í×È¡¤°Â¶ûµÂÁÖÔÚÔÂÇòÉÏ˵µÄµÚÒ»¾ä»°¾ÍÊÇ ¡®OK£¬·¢¶¯»úÍ£Ö¹¡¯¡£¡±
After all, to activate Google Glass, you don¡¯t say, ¡°OMG, Glass,¡± you say, ¡°OK, Glass.¡±¶øÇÒ£¬¹È¸èÑÛ¾µµÄÓïÒôÆô¶¯ÊÇ¡°OK, Glass¡±¶ø²»ÊÇ¡°OMG, Glass¡±¡£

¡°We happen to know the exact date and place of the very first ¡®OK¡¯ and that¡¯s not very usual for many words so why not celebrate that day?¡± says Metcalf, whose book built on Read¡¯s earlier research.Ã·ÌØ¿¨·ò˵£º¡°ÎÒÃÇÖªµÀÁËOKµ®ÉúµÄʱ¼äºÍµØµã£¬Õâ¶ÔÓÚÐí¶à´ÊÓïÀ´Ëµ²¢²»³£¼û£¬ËùÒÔÎÒÃÇΪʲô²»Çì×£ÕâÒ»ÌìÄØ£¿¡±ËûµÄÊé¡¶OK£ºÃÀ¹ú×îΰ´ó´ÊÓï²»¿É˼ÒéµÄ¹ÊÊ¡·ÊÇÔÚÄÇλÒѹʴÊԴѧ¼ÒÀïµÂÔçÆÚµÄÑо¿»ù´¡Éϱà׫µÄ¡£
In a sense, the United Nations ¡ª where six languages are instantaneously converted by experts ¡ª celebrates the word every day. In fact, translators don¡¯t even bother to render ¡°OK¡± in each diplomat¡¯s chosen tongue because everyone on the planet understands it already.´ÓijÖÖÒâÒåÉÏÀ´Ëµ£¬ÓÐרҵÒëÕßͬʱ·Òë6ÖÖÓïÑÔµÄÁªºÏ¹úÿÌì¶¼ÔÚÔÞÃÀOKÕâ¸ö´Ê¡£ÊÂʵÉÏ£¬·ÒëÔ±ÃDz»Óý«OK·Òë³ÉÍâ½»¹ÙµÄĸÓÒòΪÿ¸öÈ˶¼¶®µÃËüµÄÒâ˼¡£
¡°It¡¯s a word that tends not to be translated, but transported,¡± says Peter Connor, the director of the Center for Translation studies at Barnard College.°ÍÄɵÂѧԺ·ÒëÑо¿ÖÐÐÄÖ÷ÈÎÆ¤ÌØ¡¤¿µÄɱíʾ£º¡°ÕâÊǸö²»Ó÷Ò룬½öÐè´«µÝµÄ´Ê¡£¡±
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