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A standard construction in English is to double a verb and use it as an exclamation, such as “Bang, bang!” or “Quack, quack!”. Most of these are names for noises. Hackers also double verbs as a concise, sometimes sarcastic comment on what the implied subject does. Also, a doubled verb is often used to terminate a conversation, in the process remarking on the current state of affairs or what the speaker intends to do next. Typical examples involve win, lose, hack, flame, barf, chomp:
Some verb-doubled constructions have special meanings not immediately obvious from the verb. These have their own listings in the lexicon. The Usenet culture has one
tripling convention unrelated to this; the names of
‘joke’ topic groups often have a tripled last element. The first
and paradigmatic example was
These two traditions fuse in the newsgroup |
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