tml on leave ...go gai gaiOriginally posted by jay_rocks:harlo pct. tml work leh. still dun orh
dun corrupt my mind! i am just a noob!Originally posted by jay_rocks:u nv ask dirty things to bbl ah
great influence person. juz now he wan to talk dirty stuffs with sbst, i ping ming act blur. hahaOriginally posted by poon cho tang:![]()
so good. 2 leave in 3 weeks.Originally posted by poon cho tang:tml on leave ...go gai gai
allo cheet gau bueyOriginally posted by 798:hello pct!
Originally posted by poon cho tang:wah...ltr pah game finish then read
The slang term [b]noob (also spelled newbie, newb, or n00b in leetspeak) means a newcomer to a particular corner of cyberspace, such as a game, newsgroup, the World Wide Web itself, or an operating system. It can be both a disparaging and friendly term, always referring to a neophyte. The word itself is likely a corruption of new boy, the equivalent figure in real life — usually observed as a new arrival in a school and who is, therefore, vulnerable to bullying of various kinds. On Google's Usenet archive, the word first appears in 1988. The term was used prior to this as slang in the U.S. Military to denote men who had finished technical school and were just arriving to their first permanent assignment.
The words newbie and n00b are sometimes differentiated. If they are, a newbie is someone who follows all protocols and essentially acts like an established user but still in the process of learning, while a n00b is an obnoxious person who has not even considered that they might be irritating others. A stereotype is that they all type in Internet shorthand, which is sometimes known as "AOLer" or "AOL-speak."
There are numerous spelling variations, usually substituting different letters for the vowel sounds and dropping the second syllable (newb, noob, nub). Different spellings may carry different connotations within a particular community, but in general the spelling does not affect the meaning. In practice, differences in interpretation tend to depend more on context than on spelling.[/b]
who cares wot other ppl r tokking abt...as long as they dun insult mi can liowsOriginally posted by jay_rocks:great influence person. juz now he wan to talk dirty stuffs with sbst, i ping ming act blur. haha
tuesday on leave alsoOriginally posted by jay_rocks:so good. 2 leave in 3 weeks.
798, u got so guai meh
like whoOriginally posted by poon cho tang:who cares wot other ppl r tokking abt...as long as they dun insult mi can liows
but sum ppl really gorng buey sian
3 leave in 3 weeks. siao..Originally posted by poon cho tang:tuesday on leave also
sollie...no names hereOriginally posted by jay_rocks:like who
leave is entitlement...so must takeOriginally posted by jay_rocks:3 leave in 3 weeks. siao..
Originally posted by poon cho tang:oic.
The slang term [b]noob (also spelled newbie, newb, or n00b in leetspeak) means a newcomer to a particular corner of cyberspace, such as a game, newsgroup, the World Wide Web itself, or an operating system. It can be both a disparaging and friendly term, always referring to a neophyte. The word itself is likely a corruption of new boy, the equivalent figure in real life — usually observed as a new arrival in a school and who is, therefore, vulnerable to bullying of various kinds. On Google's Usenet archive, the word first appears in 1988. The term was used prior to this as slang in the U.S. Military to denote men who had finished technical school and were just arriving to their first permanent assignment.
The words newbie and n00b are sometimes differentiated. If they are, a newbie is someone who follows all protocols and essentially acts like an established user but still in the process of learning, while a n00b is an obnoxious person who has not even considered that they might be irritating others. A stereotype is that they all type in Internet shorthand, which is sometimes known as "AOLer" or "AOL-speak."
There are numerous spelling variations, usually substituting different letters for the vowel sounds and dropping the second syllable (newb, noob, nub). Different spellings may carry different connotations within a particular community, but in general the spelling does not affect the meaning. In practice, differences in interpretation tend to depend more on context than on spelling.[/b]
eh sai...Originally posted by poon cho tang:sollie...no names here
u say u r a noob, but u donno wot is a noob?Originally posted by 798:oic.
now summarise into 50 wordsOriginally posted by jay_rocks:eh sai...
wah ...lagg.
lol..read finish the meaning. so long
simi is entitlement? go holiday since its 2 dayOriginally posted by poon cho tang:leave is entitlement...so must take
i only know noob is newbie acting like smartalex and dunno rulez of forum.Originally posted by poon cho tang:u say u r a noob, but u donno wot is a noob?
entitlement = must haveOriginally posted by jay_rocks:simi is entitlement? go holiday since its 2 day
noob means u r stupid at smth and irritating.Originally posted by poon cho tang:now summarise into 50 words
good summaryOriginally posted by 798:i only know noob is newbie acting like smartalex and dunno rulez of forum.