azurelunatic: Vivid pink Alaskan wild rose. (Default)
Azure Jane Lunatic (Azz) 🌺 ([personal profile] azurelunatic) wrote2014-09-15 11:41 am

A thing to consider not doing around me

There is a thing that sometimes people do, to be funny or for emphasis or whatever. It is the thing where they substitute the letter L for R in words, such as "VICTOLY" for "VICTORY".

There are many possible places and reasons to have picked up doing this, including the ever-popular "somebody I know was doing it and it seemed like fun".

The roots of this substitution is making fun of people with no distinction between R/L sounds, which is common when people whose first language is Chinese learn to speak English.

Which is why I cringe every time I encounter it, and would prefer that people not do this around me.
krait: a sea snake (krait) swimming (Default)

[personal profile] krait 2014-09-15 07:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I believe that it originated with some specific instance or instances in a videogame translation. (VICTOLY might even be one of the originals; it's been around forever.)

Which I guess is why it doesn't raise my hackles quite as much (to me it reads as "let's mock a specific product or product genre" rather than "let's mock an entire group of people"), but yep, it sure does originate from the difficulties certain languages' native speakers have with the L/R distinction in English, so I can see why it grates. It's not a thing that I've ever attempted to use humourously (I'll stick to variations on "all your base belong to us", thanks) but I shall be extra-sure to avoid it.
momijizukamori: Green icon with white text - 'I do believe in phosphorylation! I do!' with a string of DNA basepairs on the bottom (Default)

[personal profile] momijizukamori 2014-09-15 07:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, my understanding is that it was from either Japanese media translations or random insertion of English words into Japanese media in contexts that don't completely make sense, and most of the people I see using it do it more as a silly/cutesy thing (along with inserting Japanese words into English in contexts that may not make sense)