This paper investigates the process by which internet slang enters mainstream English, using Gretchen McCulloch’s Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language (2019) as its primary text. It tests the hypothesis that slang adoption follows a structured pathway shaped by digital platform design and social validation, rather than occurring randomly. The research paper applies McCulloch’s “spectrum of formality” concept to trace the journey of selected terms such as “selfie,” “ghosting,” and “stan” from online origins to formal acceptance. This analysis is supported by dictionary entry dates, and first appearances in social media. The research paper is trying to indicate that successful adoption depends on a term’s ability to name a new digital-era behavior, gain amplification through influencers or news outlets, and achieve practical utility in everyday communication. The research concludes that the movement of internet slang into common usage is a predictable and legitimized form of contemporary language change, reflecting the deepening integration of digital culture into daily life.
S.G. et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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